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Tessa Majors Murder: Suspect, 14, Is Detained After Lengthy Search Tessa Majors Murder: Suspect, 14, Is Detained After Lengthy Search
(about 3 hours later)
A 14-year-old was detained in the Bronx on Thursday in the killing of Tessa Majors, the Barnard College student who was stabbed in a park near campus during what was apparently a mugging. A 14-year-old was detained in the Bronx on Thursday in the killing of Tessa Majors, the Barnard College student who was stabbed in a park near campus during what the police believe was a mugging.
New York City police had been searching for the teenager since the day after the killing on Dec. 11, and officials had taken the unusual step of releasing his photo in an effort to locate him. New York City police had been searching for the teenager since the day after the killing on Dec. 11, and officials had taken the unusual step of releasing a photo of a minor in an effort to locate him.
Ms. Majors, 18, was attacked by three teenagers in Morningside Park in Manhattan, and the 14-year-old detained on Thursday is believed to have been the one who stabbed her, the police said. Ms. Majors, 18, was attacked just after nightfall by three teenagers in Morningside Park in Manhattan, and the 14-year-old detained early Thursday is believed to have been the one who stabbed her, the police said.
The Police Department’s chief of detectives, Rodney Harrison, announced the detention on Twitter. On Thursday morning, investigators were questioning the boy, whom the authorities did not name, at the 26th Precinct station house in the Morningside Heights neighborhood, near where the attack occurred. The Police Department’s chief of detectives, Rodney Harrison, announced on Twitter that the suspect had been located. Investigators were questioning the boy, whom the authorities did not name, into the afternoon at the 26th Precinct station house in Morningside Heights, near where the attack occurred.
Ms. Majors’s murder jolted a city that has in recent years become accustomed to low rates of violent crime and recalled an era three decades ago, when many parks were considered dangerous to enter after dark. Ms. Majors’s murder jolted a city that has become accustomed to low rates of violent crime. It recalled an era three decades ago, when many parks were considered dangerous to enter after dark.
Ms. Majors, who had moved to New York from Virginia to attend the college months earlier, was walking in Morningside Park the night of Dec. 11 when, the police said, at least three teenagers, ages 13 and 14, tried to rob her. Ms. Majors, who had moved to New York from Virginia to attend Barnard months earlier, was walking in Morningside Park the night of Dec. 11 when, the police said, at least three teenagers, ages 13 and 14, tried to rob her.
She struggled and one of her assailants stabbed her several times, the police said. A campus security guard found her bleeding to death on a sidewalk just outside the park near Morningside Avenue and West 116th Street. She struggled, and one of her assailants stabbed her with a knife several times, the police said. A campus security guard found her bleeding to death on a sidewalk just outside the park near Morningside Avenue and West 116th Street.
A 13-year-old was arrested the next day and gave statements to the police implicating himself and two 14-year-old classmates in the crime. According to two detectives who have testified at hearings, the boy said his friends grabbed Ms. Majors from behind and took a plastic bag from her pocket. Then one stabbed her as she fought back, the boy told the police, recalling that the feathers from her down coat floated in the air. A 13-year-old was arrested the next day and gave statements to the police implicating himself and two 14-year-old classmates in the crime. According to two detectives who have testified at hearings, the boy, whom The New York Times is not naming because he is not being charged as an adult, said his friends grabbed Ms. Majors from behind and took a plastic bag from her pocket. Then one stabbed her as she fought back, the boy told the police, recalling that the feathers from her down coat floated in the air.
The police tried to interview one of the 14-year-olds, but he requested a lawyer and declined to give a statement. He was released on Dec. 12.The police tried to interview one of the 14-year-olds, but he requested a lawyer and declined to give a statement. He was released on Dec. 12.
For weeks, detectives were unable to locate the 14-year-old whom they believe to be the one who stabbed Ms. Majors. The department distributed photos of him nine days after the murder and asked for the public’s help. For weeks, detectives were unable to locate the 14-year-old whom they believe to have stabbed Ms. Majors. The department distributed photographs of him nine days after the murder and asked for the public’s help.
The Police Department seldom seeks the public’s assistance in finding minors who are suspects in major crimes. But investigators, under pressure to solve the first high-profile murder under the newly minted police commissioner, Dermot F. Shea, seemed eager to find the wanted boy. The distribution of the photos was a measure of the difficulty investigators had faced in the case, the first high-profile murder under the newly minted police commissioner, Dermot F. Shea. A police official familiar with case said investigators had spared no resources in their manhunt.
The Times generally does not publish photos of minors accused of crimes.
At a news conference last week, Mr. Shea said he was troubled by the young ages of people tied to an uptick of robberies in pockets of the city, including the neighborhood where Ms. Majors was attacked.
“Thirteen is young,” Mr. Shea said. “I mean, I think it should disturb any New Yorker when we have a child involved in something this serious.”
From the start, Ms. Majors’s case evoked memories of the infamous attack on a jogger in Central Park in April 1989, and the police have been proceeding cautiously. In the 1989 case, the police and prosecutors obtained confessions from several teenagers through tough interrogation techniques. Those confessions turned out to be false.
A public defender for the 13-year-old, who took the case after the police interviewed the teenager, has laid the groundwork to challenge his confession — pointing out in court that even though the boy was accompanied by his uncle when he met with detectives, the police used some techniques that might call the reliability of his statements into question.
Specifically, the defense lawyer, Hannah Kaplan of the Legal Aid Society, has said in hearings that one of the detectives badgered and yelled at the boy. The detective also introduced the idea of the knife into the conversation even though the boy had not mentioned a knife, Ms. Kaplan said.
Beyond the 13-year-old’s statements, the police have footage from security cameras of the boys leaving the park and one grainy video of the attack, according to the detectives’ testimony in two previous hearings. They have yet to locate the murder weapon.
The Legal Aid Society has also sought to undermine the credibility of one of the detectives involved in the investigation, Wilfred Acevedo, pointing out that he has been sued several times over allegations of misconduct, including false arrest, making false accusations and withholding evidence helpful to a defendant.
None of the allegations were proved at trial, but the city settled some of the lawsuits out of court. The lawsuits were reported in Gothamist.
“These allegations of a pattern of serious misconduct cast further doubt on the case against our client, and given Acevedo’s long problematic history of violating New Yorkers’ constitutional rights, he simply cannot be regarded as credible,” the Legal Aid Society said in a statement.