Ethan Reyes aka notti osama death video, dd yonkers stabbing
How did Ethan Reyes live? A 15-year-old stabbed to death a 14-year-old aspiring rapper on a subway platform in Manhattan.
A 15-year-old boy has been arrested and charged with killing the aspiring rapper, who also went by the name Notti Osama.
In a scary event, a 15-year-old teen stabbed a 14-year-old to death on the platform of the northbound 1 train at the 137th Street-City College station in Hamilton Heights, Upper Manhattan. On Saturday, July 9, before 3 p.m., someone was stabbed. Because the accused was so young, the New York Police Department did not make his name public. But the police found out that the victim was a young rapper in Manhattan named Ethan Reyes, who went by the stage name "Notti Osama."
Police say that the suspect and Reyes, who lives in Yonkers, got into an argument at the 137th Street/City College subway station around 3 p.m. on Saturday, July 9. The police say that the two of them had a long-running fight. It wasn't clear at first what it was about. Sources say that Reyes pushed the other boy on the tracks at first. But, police sources say, he was then stabbed and fell down on the subway station steps as he tried to run away. The 14-year-old didn't make it through his injuries, and at St. Luke's Hospital, he was pronounced dead.
At the scene, police found a knife and a broom. Officials from the NYPD say that the teens' movements were caught on security video from the train station. Police say that a description of the boy who was wanted helped transit officers find and catch the 15-year-old boy within hours. Not long after that, police took the suspect into custody at 173rd Street and Broadway. The suspect has not been named. People say he was bleeding from his back and stomach, and his hip was hurt. He was taken to a hospital nearby and treated. On Sunday morning, July 10, he was arrested and charged with murder and having a weapon.
A straphanger talked about the moment he saw the 14-year-old boy who was about to die. "His lips were purple and his eyes were rolled back, and he was bleeding a lot," the witness said, adding that he saw a group of teenage girls run out of the station. "They were trying to steal his phone." Their neighbors told The Post that Reyes's family had just moved to Yonkers in May.
Earlier this morning, @RepEspaillat and I met with the community at the site of last night’s stabbing in Harlem.
The work of public safety begins with conversations like this. With letting New Yorkers know their leaders are working around the clock to protect them. pic.twitter.com/J5VjJIbqdh— Mayor Eric Adams (@NYCMayor) July 10, 2022
Mayor Eric Adams said again that the city needs to offer more summer programs for teens to keep them busy and off the streets. Adams said Saturday afternoon, "Hearing about the stabbing really shows why we need the lights on in schools like this. We need to find out what happened, and we're going to find out who did it."
Barry Weinberg, who is in charge of Manhattan Community Board 9, said, "It's very sad because it's tragic." "We've also asked for violence interrupters to be put in this area, from 134th to 140th streets around Broadway, as they have been in other trouble spots in the city, but we've never gotten that kind of investment," he said.
In a statement released Sunday, July 10, Richard Davey, president of MTA NYC transit, said, "We thank NYPD detectives, with whom we worked, for quickly catching a suspect." He also said that the attack wasn't random and that the victim and the person who did it were friends. "The fact that he and the victim may have known each other makes this terrible event even more senseless."