10.01.08
Forensic experts testify in Park Slope murder
Posted in RW1 Class Stories tagged brooklyn, courts, crime, murder, Park Slope, trial at 3:06 pm by matuas
The handle of the knife used to stab a man to death in Park Slope last year held the DNA of both the deceased and his attacker, forensics experts told a Brooklyn jury yesterday.
Rebecca Mikulasovich, an expert in forensic biology with the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner testified in the murder trial of 30-year-old Antonio Bruno of Bushwick. She described the process by which her team of forensics scientists tested samples swabbed from the knife. A swab of the handle taken by the NYPD at the scene of the crime contained the DNA of both Bruno and William Rosario, the deceased.
A second swab, taken after Mikulasovich’s team received the knife, was inconclusive, she said.
“The NYPD’s swab tested negative for blood, but positive for other biological material, which could be tissue or skin cells from a hand,” she said. “William Rosario and Antonio Bruno contributed to a mixture of DNA on the handle.”
Bruno faces charges of second degree murder, first degree manslaughter, and fourth degree criminal possession of a weapon, all related to the stabbing death of Rosario on November 12 last year. According to court files, the incident occurred during a heated argument between the two men in front of 298 12th St. in Bushwick. Rosario was 26 when he died.
In morning session one other forensic expert from Mikulasovich’s team who had inspected the knife confirmed that DNA of both men was on it.
Forensic expert Melissa Smith, , said clothing worn by the men that was inspected at the scene came up with inconclusive results, except for Rosario’s jacket, which was stained with his own blood.
The defense does not deny that Bruno stabbed Rosario, but the specific circumstances surrounding the stabbing is at issue in the case.
The prosecution, led by Assistant District Attorney Samantha Magnani, has spent the lengthy trial, which has lasted nearly a year attempting to convince the jury that Bruno was the aggressor.
According to documents outlining prosecution’s version of events, Rosario was on his way home from a bowling alley with two of his children and some friends when he encountered Bruno, who got into an argument then threatened and attacked Rosario with the knife. Rosario’s family has corroborated these versions of events.
Ivan Vogel, Bruno’s defense attorney, said he didn’t think the DNA evidence presented yesterday helped the prosecution’s case.
“DNA evidence is all about whodunit,” he said. “We’re not denying the stabbing of a person, but it was done in self-defense. If he didn’t defend himself, he would have ended up dead.”
Vogel said there is evidence that Rosario and his friends were armed on the night in question.
“They were looking to cause serious injury to my client,,” he said, adding added that Rosario had escalated the initial argument, that his client tried backing away from Rosario and his friends, and that Rosario had both alcohol and angel dust in his system when he died.
He said that the two men did not know each other prior to the incident.
Vogel, whose short defense lasted only an afternoon called only one witness to bolster his version of the incident, Detective Alfredo Hidalgo of the NYPD’s 72nd precinct.
Hidalgo testified that while he was investigating the case, he interviewed an eyewitness named Ben Smith, who said that Rosario and two friends had bottles in heir hands. Vogel said that he will argued that these bottles were used as aggressive weapons.
Both sides of the trial will give their summations today.
09.23.08
One dead after fight in Flatbush turns deadly
Posted in RW1 Class Stories tagged brooklyn, crime, east flatbush, murder at 3:01 pm by matuas
One man is dead and another is in the hospital after a fight between two groups of young men escalated into a shooting in the lobby of an apartment complex in East Flatbush, Brooklyn Monday night, police said.
Jamel Wisdom, a 19-year-old who lived on nearby Ocean Avenue, was declared dead shortly after police and ambulances arrived, police said.
According to Ellen Borakave, a representative from the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, Wisdom died of multiple gunshot wounds to the head, torso, and right arm.
“When I see that one go in the ambulance, he wasn’t doing nothing,” said the superintendent of a nearby building who declined to give his name. “He was just white.”
The injured man, a 19-year-old that police have yet to publicly identify, was taken to nearby Kings College Hospital, where he is recovering from a gunshot wound to the leg, and is in stable condition, police said.
The altercation began last night between two groups of youths, thought to be in their late teens or early twenties, outside of an apartment building at 68 E. 19th St., police said. Police confirmed that both groups knew each other.
Just before 11:00 p.m., Wisdom and at least two other youths ran into the building’s lobby, where Wisdom and one other victim were shot, police said.
The building’s superintendent, Carlos Ayala was eating dinner with his family when he heard several gunshots. He said that there was a group of about eight people outside of his building at that time.
“Some guy is shooting in the lobby, he kills people,” he said. “All the time, it’s in the street. This time, it’s in the building.”
Some eyewitnesses, who refused to give their names out of fear that the gunman would attack them, said they saw a man with a gunshot wound in the knee run around the corner shortly after the gunshots.
Police and ambulances arrived shortly thereafter, responding to a quick 911 call, while residents quickly streamed outside to watch the commotion, police and Ayala said.
A 22-year-old man who declined to give his name knew the injured victim but only identified him by his street nickname, “Geddy.”
The altercation was caught on the lobby’s video cameras, Ayala said, and South Brooklyn detectives were on the scene reviewing the tapes and looking for possible eyewitnesses Tuesday morning.
A handful of uniformed police also stood outside of the building, garnering glares from passing residents. Residents and witnesses were reluctant to give details to reporters.
While few residents spoke to police and reporters, friends of Wisdom quickly made a heartfelt online memorial for him on MySpace. The mournful page contains pictures of Wisdom and identifies his by his street name, “Smooth.”
Police said that there have been several shootings in the area recently, including one on nearby Parade Place.
As of Tuesday night, police said that no arrests had been made and that the investigation is ongoing.