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NYC Crime: 2 young children stabbed to death in the Bronx; mother in custody

MOUNT HOPE, The Bronx (WABC) — Police are investigating after a three-year-old boy and an 11-month-old boy were stabbed to death in the Bronx.

It happened at a family shelter on Echo Place in Mount Hope on Saturday evening. The boys were found with multiple stab wounds to the neck and torso.

NYPD held an update Saturday night:

When police arrived they found the mother inside the apartment on the third floor acting erratic. Sources say the mother then tried to burn the apartment down with the stove and then turned the water on.

Police then took the mother into custody. She was taken to the hospital for evaluation.

Less than an hour later, a second 911 call was then received reporting two unresponsive children at the same location. Officers returned to the apartment where they found the three-year-old and 11-month old with stab wounds. Officers and another family member attempted to resuscitate the boys, but they were unsuccessful.

Neighbors who live down the hall say the walls in the building are thin. They say they head the parents of the two young boys arguing and screaming earlier in the night. They also heard the boys father hysterically crying for help.

“He was screaming hysterically. He was screaming ‘help me.’ And I came and opened my door and I seen him coming down the hall with the two boys in his arms. They were dead, they were dead. There was blood everywhere,” said Shannon Holyfield.

The boys were rushed to Columbia Presbyterian in extremely critical condition where they later died.

ALSO READ | 16-year-old stabbed by another teen inside Staten Island Mall

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NYC Crime: Subway dispute over dropped phone turns deadly in Jackson Heights, Queens

JACKSON HEIGHTS, Queens (WABC) — A 50-year-old man is under arrest after a fight with another subway rider ended with that man fatally struck by a train in Elmhurst, Queens.

The suspect was standing near the platform of the Jackson Heights-Roosevelt Ave. station at around 4:45 p.m. Monday when 48-year-old Heriberto Quintana bumped into him while walking by.

The contact sent the suspect’s cellphone tumbling onto the subway tracks.

The suspect, Carlos Garcia, told the victim to go get his phone. He refused, and the two began arguing which then became a brawl.

In a defensive move, Garcia pushed the victim off his body, causing him to slide headfirst across the platform into the front of a moving F train.

Quintana, of Queens, was pronounced dead at Elmhurst Hospital.

Garcia was arrested on a charge of manslaughter. He does not have a significant criminal history.

It was the ninth killing in the city’s subway system this year, and the 10th in transit.

The latest in a series of high-profile incidents in the New York City transit system has left transit president Rich Davey frustrated.

“Yeah, it’s frustrating, you know, I wish I could wave a magic wand and, you know, get folks who need mental health services mental health,” Davey said. “Some of these crimes are senseless. Yesterday’s act, it seems, was senseless. Was over a cellphone, for God’s sake.”

Davey toured the Union Square station Tuesday, which has been the scene of several incidents in recent months-where there was a sizable police presence in the afternoon.

Conductors have been ordered to make announcements to reassure riders when police are onboard or on the platforms.

Police are hoping to prevent what riders fear most-random, unprovoked attacks. Just this weekend, German Sabio survived being shoved into the path of a 6 train in The Bronx. A woman was brutally beaten in Jamaica, Queens last month. Others have been shot and stabbed.

Davey says some of the attacks have happened despite police presence on the platforms.

“I think we’re doing everything we can, you know?” Davey said. “And NYPD, I know this morning, we met with another 63 police officers that are graduating that will be brought here to transit. So look, I think we can always do more, to your point, but there’s a lot going on. That’s what we’re highlighting today.”

ALSO READ | Eyewitness News gets exclusive ride-along with NYPD commissioner amid fear over subway crime

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NYC Crime: Man dies after falling on subway tracks during fight in Queens

JACKSON HEIGHTS, Queens (WABC) — A man has died after falling on subway tracks during a fight in Queens.

It happened Monday at 74th Street and Broadway at the Jackson Heights-Roosevelt Ave station.

Police say a 48-year-old man got into a fight with another man and then fell on the tracks. Police are looking at video to determine how he ended up on the tracks.

The man was then struck by a Jamaica-bound F train.

The victim was taken to Elmhurst Hospital where he was later pronounced dead.

Police have a man in custody, and an investigation is ongoing.

ALSO READ | Eyewitness News gets exclusive ride-along with NYPD commissioner amid fear over subway crime

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NYC Crime: 18-year-old in custody after teen killed in shooting on subway in Queens

FAR ROCKAWAY, Queens (WABC) — An 18-year-old is in custody after a teen was killed in a shooting on the subway in Queens.

Police have identified the 15-year-old killed on Friday as Jayjon Burnett.

Police say a single gunshot rang out on a southbound A train just before 3:45 p.m. Friday after a dispute broke out between two groups of teens.

The bullet struck Burnett in the chest.

A Good Samaritan escorted the teen off the train when it arrived at the Mott Avenue Station in Far Rockaway. Once on the platform, two transit bureau officers that were patrolling the station rushed over to the victim to render aid. EMS later arrived to perform CPR.

The teen was taken to Cohen’s Children’s Hospital where he was later pronounced dead.

NYPD detectives are looking at MTA cameras and speaking to witnesses.

“We’ve seen a lot this year where disputes quickly lead to verbal arguments and quickly lead to physical disputes confrontations that unfortunately have led to violence,” said NYPD Transit Bureau Chief Jason Wilcox.

Police sources say they are looking into a gang component to the shooting, and they stress it was not a random act of violence.

Service on the A train was suspended between Far Rockaway-Mott Ave and Broad Channel in both directions during the investigation.

The shooting death is the eighth person killed in the transit system this year.

ALSO READ | Eyewitness News gets exclusive ride-along with NYPD commissioner amid fear over subway crime

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NYC Crime: Suspect arrested in unprovoked stabbing death in Bronx subway station

MORRIS HEIGHTS, Bronx (WABC) — Police have made an arrest in the deadly stabbing of a man in a Bronx subway station on Thursday.

Saquan Lemons, 27, of the Bronx was arrested Saturday afternoon on charges including murder, manslaughter, and criminal possession of a weapon, authorities said.

The victim, Charles Moore, 38, was getting off a northbound No. 4 train as it arrived at the 176th Street station just before 9 p.m. Thursday when he was stabbed multiple times in the back and chest.

Moore collapsed on the platform awas rushed to St. Barnabas Hospital, where he later died, becoming the seventh person to be killed in the NYC transit system this year, and the second fatal subway stabbing in less than a week.

Friends and family say that Moore’s world revolved around his 8-year-old daughter, Charlie.

“She was his life. She was Charles’ life – if there’s one thing I can say about my son, he was a damn good father. A better father than what we had,” said Moore’s mother, Frances Vanterpool.

On Saturday, friends toasted him, cried and lit candles for a second night – but this time, they knew that a suspect was in custody.

Police did not say how they found Lemons, but the MTA’s Security chief thanked him in a statement for their use of MTA cameras in making the quick arrest.

Police are still investigating whether this was a random attack. Moore’s mother says it had to be.

“It was unprovoked, there was no words spoken between that man and my son. The man stabbed my son in the back, several times,” she said.

While the arrest is a relief to family and friends who were honoring Moore, it doesn’t make the loss any less painful.

“I mean, he’s arrested – that’s it. But it won’t bring my friend back,” said Darrel Colquhoun.

Colquhoun was actually on the phone with Moore minutes before he was attacked, while Moore was on his way home from work at Citi Field.

“Everything was normal, we were just talking about my son’s basketball,” Colquhoun said.

They were planning to hang out before Moore would spend the weekend with his little girl.

Moore’s mother says a murder conviction is all she wants at this point – her family has been through unimaginable loss. Ten years ago, Moore’s nephew, Teddy Beckles was killed in a stabbing outside his school. Just last year, Moore’s sister suffered a fatal heart attack.

“I can’t take no more,” said Vanterpool.

ALSO READ | Who is the NYC rooftop jumper? Eyewitness News solves mystery behind viral daredevil stunt

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NYC Crime: Man dies after being stabbed in unprovoked subway attack in the Bronx

MORRIS HEIGHTS, Bronx (WABC) — Three men were stabbed, one fatally, in separate attacks in the New York City subway system within an eight-hour span.

A 38-year-old Bronx man was getting off a northbound No. 4 train as it arrived at the 176th St. station just before 9 p.m. Thursday when he was stabbed multiple times in the back and chest by a suspect who came up behind him in what seemed to police to be an unprovoked attack.

The victim collapsed on the platform, was rushed to St. Barnabas Hospital, where he later died, becoming the seventh person to be killed in the NYC transit system this year, and the second fatal subway stabbing in less than a week.

His name was being withheld pending notification of family members.

The suspect is described as a man with a dark complexion, about 5’11, and was last seen wearing a dark-hooded sweatshirt and Nike sneakers.

Earlier Thursday, at 5:15 p.m., a 45-year-old man was slashed in the face by a man who followed him into a Brooklyn subway station in East New York.

Just after 1 p.m., a 59-year-old man was stabbed in the back at a Harlem subway station. The victim was waiting for a train at the 125th St station at St Nicholas Avenue when he got into an argument with a man he didn’t know, possibly after a harmless bump on the platform.

The other man pulled a knife and stabbed the victim in the upper back. He was taken to Mount Sinai Morningside hospital in stable condition

The suspect, last seen wearing blue jeans, a blue jacket and blue tinted glasses, ran off.

New York City Police Commissioner Keechant Sewell said the NYPD had “to do more” after three people were stabbed, one fatally, in three separate attacks on the subway within an 8-hour span.

“We’ve surged thousands of officers into the subway system,” Sewell said Friday during a news conference. “We have to deter and prevent this activity.”

Police said it was too soon to talk motive for the seemingly random attacks. None of the suspects is in custody.

“There was no contact in that train car between the victim and assailant,” Chief of Department Kenneth Corey said of the fatal stabbing in the Bronx. “Looking at the video, it looks as though the attacker goes after that individual specifically. We don’t know what the motive is.”

Police have made more than 600 arrests for illegal cutting instruments on the subway so far this year.

Transit Chief Jason Wilcox said that’s a 95% increase from last year.

“The events of yesterday, very disturbing,” Wilcox said. “We are going to be out there with the riders and for the riders, keeping them safe.”

Eyewitness News spoke with concerned riders overnight.

“The most I can do different is basically be a little more vigilant than usual, but I’m not surprised,” said one.

“I typically feel OK at this particular subway, first time I heard something this tragic at this subway,” said another.

“Crime is pretty high right now, so I don’t think it’s an isolated situation,” said a third commuter.

Anyone with information on any of these cases is urged to contact the NYPD.

Call the NYPD’s Crime Stoppers Hotline at 1-800-577-TIPS (8477) or for Spanish, 1-888-57-PISTA (74782). You can also submit tips by visiting the CrimeStoppers website at crimestoppers.nypdonline.org or by messaging on Twitter @NYPDTips.

ALSO READ | Who is the NYC rooftop jumper? Eyewitness News solves mystery behind viral daredevil stunt

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NYC Crime: Man crashed into SUV to rob man at gunpoint on Upper East Side

UPPER EAST SIDE, Manhattan (WABC) — Police are searching for the driver of a black Mercedes after he crashed into an SUV to rob a man at gunpoint on the Upper East Side.

Police say the thieves slammed into the victim’s car causing it to jump the curb around 5 p.m. Saturday on 91st Street and 2nd Avenue.

The passenger of the Mercedes ran out and robbed the 55-year-old victim, then ran back into the getaway car.

No one was physically hurt.

Police believe the robber and the victim knew each other.

An investigation is underway.

ALSO READ | NYPD releases bodycam of officer hitting woman, mayor defends police

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LGBTQ monkeypox patients use social media to help each other get treatment

Doctors that specialize in LGBTQ health are asking federal officials to cut the red tape that’s preventing people from getting the only treatment known to help those suffering with severe cases of monkeypox.

Tecovirimat, or TPOXX, is a drug most people have likely never heard of. It’s an antiviral approved by the FDA to treat smallpox. The FDA says it may be used to treat monkeypox as well. The CDC is making it available under what is called “expanded access.”

But TPOXX is so complicated to get that members of the LGBTQ community have taken it upon themselves to help each other. They’ve built a shareable Google document to help monkeypox patients find doctors that not only know what TPOXX is but how to navigate the cumbersome prescription process.

On Monday, Twitter user Crazy Broke Asian @tribranchvo took to the social media platform to lay out the various avenues at which he’d struck out when it comes to trying to get treatment for the painful symptoms of his monkeypox infection.

“It’s excruciating pain—like, I’ve never felt pain so bad in my life,” the Twitter user told FOX 5 NY.

Tri—who preferred we not use his last name—agreed to speak to us about his ordeal on the phone rather than Zoom, since he’s still in too much discomfort, predominantly due to the lesions. Those lesions have appeared in sensitive areas, including his genitals.

An urgent care physician told him they could not prescribe treatment for it.

He tried the city-run sexual health clinic in Chelsea, which suggested he go to a primary care provider. His PCP said she could not prescribe it.

So he turned to social media. That is when others in the LGBTQ community sent him a link to a shared Google document created by Luke Brown who experienced similarly painful symptoms weeks earlier.

“I wouldn’t wish it on anybody, and that’s one of the reasons I am still so fired up about trying to get people vaccine access and trying to help people get treatment,” Brown told FOX 5 NY. “I’m not particularly pain sensitive but I was brought to tears by this despite being on opioids.”

The document includes information for doctors who may not be aware of the process of obtaining TPOXX. Right now, that involves complicated paperwork sent to the CDC for approval. It also includes a short list of providers who are already familiar with TPOXX prescriptions.

Tri went to the first clinic on the list, got the medication, and after one day of treatment, his symptoms have already improved, he said.

“I would say maybe like 30% less pain than yesterday,” he said.

He wrote on Twitter that he was “emotional” and so thankful to the community for sending him the document. 

But both men wish it wasn’t necessary.

“My document shouldn’t exist,” Brown said. “I would love to take it down and just redirect people to comprehensive public health messaging on how to acquire this one. But it really does fill a vacuum.”

On a conference call on Tuesday, leaders of sexual health clinics with a focus on the LGBTQ community urged Secretary of Health and Human Services Javier Becerra to declare a federal public health emergency and to make the drug more easily accessible.

“It’s unconscionable not to further make changes to make TPOXX accessible to all that need it,” National Coalition of STD Directors’ David Harvey said. “We know this is an investigational drug, but the federal government has options for how it can make this drug available on an expedited emergency basis.”

FOX 5 NY asked the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services if Becerra is considering a federal public health emergency, which would free up more funds. We also asked if the department might streamline the process for obtaining TPOXX. HHS declined to answer and instead pointed us to the FDA’s website.

We also asked the New York City Health Department what it might be able to do to assist in the process. The department declined to speak on camera but in a statement wrote, in part, that it is asking federal partners to “address the barriers to prescribing” TPOXX. New York City-based providers have initiated TPOXX treatment for 450 patients to date. 

New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene Full Statement

The Health Department has been on the forefront of working to help clinics and hospital systems set up to prescribe TPOXX quickly. Any provider can prescribe TPOXX under the current federal protocol, and the Health Department is a resource to help providers get started. We are providing technical assistance, treatment guidance and direct outreach to hundreds of providers across the city. We are coordinating requests from providers for TPOXX from the national strategic stockpile. We have partnered with a pharmacy to deliver TOPXX to patient’s homes or health care facilities. And we are continuing to advocate for our federal partners to address the barriers to prescribing.

Monkeypox Symptoms

Monkeypox begins as a rash or sores that can look like pimples or blisters. These bumps can appear all over the body — including your face, hands, feet, mouth, genitals or anus — and can become infected.

The symptoms usually start between a week to two weeks after exposure but may not appear for up to 21 days. The sickness can last from two to four weeks with flu-like symptoms including fever, chills, fatigue, swollen lymph nodes, headache, and body aches and pains—like a weaker version of smallpox. 

“If you have a new or unexpected rash or other symptoms of monkeypox, contact a health care provider,” the New York City Health Department states. “A person is contagious until all sores have healed, and a new layer of skin has formed, which can take two to four weeks.”



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NYC monkeypox cases double again; officials hold town hall

The number of likely monkeypox cases in New York City has once again doubled in a week.

As of Monday, July 11, 223 people in the city have tested positive for orthopoxvirus (see below) and all likely have monkeypox, according to the city’s Health Department. That is up from 111 cases on July 5 and more than quadruple the number from a week prior to that. 

“There are likely more cases that have not been diagnosed,” the Health Department said on its website. “Most of these people have not been hospitalized and have recovered on their own.”

The current outbreak is among gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men, the Health Department said, but anyone can get and spread monkeypox. 

Health officials with the city and the state said they are looking to work with organizations, representatives, and advocates from LGBTQ community to share resources, answer questions, and get feedback. 

Dr. Mary Bassett, the state’s health commissioner, and Dr. Ashwin Vasan, the city’s health commissioner, hosted a joint virtual town hall on Monday evening to update the public on the “evolving monkeypox outbreak.”

Monkeypox Symptoms

Monkeypox begins as a rash or sores that can look like pimples or blisters. These bumps can appear all over the body — including your face, hands, feet, mouth, genitals or anus — and can become infected.

The symptoms usually start between a week to two weeks after exposure but may not appear for up to 21 days. The sickness can last from two to four weeks with flu-like symptoms including fever, chills, fatigue, swollen lymph nodes, headache, and body aches and pains — like a weaker version of smallpox. 

“If you have a new or unexpected rash or other symptoms of monkeypox, contact a health care provider,” the Health Department states. “A person is contagious until all sores have healed, and a new layer of skin has formed, which can take two to four weeks.”

Monkeypox Vaccination

Vaccination involves getting two doses of the Jynneos vaccine, which the FDA has approved to prevent “smallpox and monkeypox disease in adults 18 years of age and older determined to be at high risk,” the agency states. The doses are administered four weeks apart.

Demand for the vaccine has been high and supply has been low, which prompted New York City to request more shots from the federal government last week. Vaccine appointment slots will open on Tuesday, July 12. 

What Is Orthopoxvirus?

Public laboratories in New York state test patient samples for orthopoxvirus, the genus, or group, of viruses that cause monkeypox, smallpox, and other diseases. 

“Cases that are confirmed positive for orthopoxvirus are considered probable monkeypox cases because of the rarity of all orthopoxviruses, generally, and the presentation of symptoms, in confirmed orthopoxvirus cases, being consistent with monkeypox,” the New York State Health Department states on its website. “Confirmed orthopoxvirus cases, or probable monkeypox cases, may be further confirmed as monkeypox through CDC testing.”

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Staten Island supermarket employee arrested for attacking Rudy Giuliani inside store

STATEN ISLAND (WABC) — A ShopRite employee is under arrest for attacking former New York mayor Rudy Giuliani on Staten Island on Sunday.

Police say Daniel Gill, 39, slapped Giuliani on the back while he was handing out flyers at the store on 3010 Veterans Road on Staten Island.

Giuliani, 78, was not injured and refused medical treatment.

Gill is facing a second degree assault charge for hitting a senior citizen.

Giuliani was at the ShopRite handing out flyers and taking pictures with people supoorting his son, Andrew Giuliani’s run for governor. His son was not at the store and was campaigning elsewhere.

Andrew Giuliani released a statement saying,

“Innocent people are attacked in today’s New York all of the time. This particular incident hit very close to home. The assault on my father, America’s Mayor, was over politics. We will not be intimidated by left wing attacks. As governor I will stand up for law and order so that New Yorkers feel safe again. This message has resonates with voters throughout my campaign, leading up to Tuesday’s primary.”

ALSO READ | Woman held hostage in NYC uses Grubhub food delivery to alert police

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