An alleged road rage maniac was busted weeks after he stabbed a Bronx livery cab driver – as prosecutors revealed the cabbie repeatedly insisted that he did not “want to fight.” 

Darin Dominick, 56, surrendered to cops Wednesday morning in connection to the early Nov. 26 attack on Ghanaian immigrant Osei “Ozzy” Kusi, 39, at White Plains Road and Randall Avenue in Castle Hill, cops said. 

Both cars were stopped at a red light around 2:30 a.m., when Dominick – who was behind Kusi – stormed up to his vehicle and banged on the driver’s side window with a baseball bat, according to a complaint filed in Bronx Criminal Court. 

Darin Dominick was arrested for stabbing Bronx livery cab driver Osei Kusi (pictured) in November. Obtained by the NYPost

NYPD officers investigating the scene of the stabbing on Nov. 26, 2025. Kyle Mazza/Shutterstock

Kusi got out of his car and pleaded, “I don’t want to fight you, I don’t want to fight you,” prosecutors said. 

But Kusi was soon on the ground and felt a “sharp object repeatedly strike his torso,” according to the criminal complaint. 

His alleged attacker then got back behind the wheel of his own car and drove off, prosecutors charged. 

“This is attempted murder,” New York State Federation of Taxi Drivers spokesperson and founder Fernando Mateo declared at the time. “He left him there to die.”

Blood seen on the ground outside of the livery cab. Kyle Mazza/Shutterstock

Meanwhile, Kusi was rushed to Jacobi Medical Center, where he was treated for eight puncture wounds to his torso and a bleeding cut on his mouth, prosecutors said. 

He received numerous stitches and repeatedly lost and regained consciousness during his treatment, according to the court doc. 

Dominick – who turned himself in at the NYPD’s 43rd Precinct – also faces assault, menacing and harassment raps, according to cops and the criminal complaint. 

Dominick drover away from the scene after allegedly stabbing Kusi. Kyle Mazza/Shutterstock

During his Wednesday arraignment, Judge Anna Mikhaleva ordered him held on $75,000 bail or $250,000 bond, over prosecutors’ request for $300,000 bail or $900,000 bond, the DA’s office said. 

He is next scheduled to appear in court on Christmas Day.

“This attack shook our community,” Mateo said in a statement. “The quick work of the 43rd Precinct and the suspect’s surrender show that no one can harm a hardworking New Yorker and simply disappear. Justice must now follow.”

Dominick has three prior arrests that date back decades — from 1997 for aggravated unlicensed operator, 1992 for criminal mischief and 1998 for robbery, authorities said.