Friday, October 06, 2017

Disgruntled Minority Murder-Suicide in Manhattan (Not Kansas); MSM Cover Up Nature of Crime with Boots

 

War crime victim Christopher Sayers
 

I thank the anonymous reader who sent me this story, observing, “No pic of shooter, as usual.”

But there are lots of ridiculous, irrelevant pics of cops in a SWAT detail on the street 38 stories below the crime scene running around, long after the crime, including worthless police girls, one fat and another tiny.

And to listen to the nihilistic union the men were members of, there was no crime.

“It is with a heavy heart that we say goodbye to two union brothers today,” the union said in a statement offering condolences to both families. “We are working diligently with authorities to assist in their investigation of the incident.”

 

Boots: The New York Post’s substitute for relevant photographs
 

I’m calling this a disgruntled minority murder/war crime, based on the scrappy koala criterion: When the MSM won’t tell us what the perp was, they’re telling us what the perp was. Plus the murderer, Samuel Perry, came from overwhelmingly black Far Rockaway (where I used to live, and still pass through several times per year), and owned a pit bull.
 

Fired construction worker fatally shoots ex-supervisor at Upper West Side job site before taking own life
By Adam Shrier Molly Crane-newman Ellen Moynihan Thomas Tracy Rich Schapiro
New York Daily News
Updated: Friday, October 6, 2017, 3:29 A.M.

An enraged carpenter — just two days after getting canned — returned to a construction site in Hell’s Kitchen Thursday and fatally shot the foreman who fired him.

Samuel Perry went to the 37th floor of the luxury building being built on W. 59th St. near 11th Ave. It was 7:10 a.m. and no one was expecting him.

Perry, 44, calmly handed his tools to a colleague.

“These are yours now,” he said, according to a witness.

Perry whipped out a gun, executed Christopher Sayers, 37, in front of horrified workers and briefly disappeared. The killer was found dead in a bathroom on the fifth floor. Police said he shot himself in the head. A handgun was found near his body.

Fellow construction worker Robert (Spider) Pagan said he had just heard what sounded like gunshots when he brushed past Perry in a 31st floor stairwell, the shooter probably on his way to his cowardly end.

Police are requesting that commuters stay away from the area as they continue to investigate.
(Marcus Santos/New York Daily News)

“I was shocked when I saw him this morning,” Pagan recalled. “I jokingly asked him, ‘Sammy, did you bring a gun to the job site?’”

“Not me, Spider,” Perry responded.

“And now I find out he shot my friend,” Pagan said.

The gunman signaled to his Queens neighbor on Tuesday — the day he got fired — that he was plotting revenge.

“He’s gonna get his,” Perry said, according to Karrine Gayle, 26, who lives on the same block in Far Rockaway.

“He said the person has been pushing his buttons for a long time and he’d had it,” added Gayle who noted that she didn’t know who he was talking about.

Gayle said she didn’t take Perry seriously until he started packing up his belongings for his son and cashed in a coin collection at Stop & Shop.

[That’s not a “coin collection.” It just meant he’d brought in a lot of change he’d had lying around the house. A “coin collection” refers to rare coins, which one does not bring to a supermarket.]

“Yesterday, I tried to talk him out of it because he said he had his mind made up and was packing stuff, but I didn’t know what to do,” Gayle said.

[Like drop a dime on a brother? No, that’s forbidden.]

Workers told police the gunman was a “bit of a hothead,” said NYPD Deputy Chief Christopher McCormack.

“We are still looking into how he got into the building,” McCormack said.

[He probably hung around the street-level entrance, and went in with a worker he knew, saying he needed to pick up something he'd left behind.]

Perry, who was known as “The Bull” for his fearsome strength, was fired after he got into a fight with Sayers over a wall he had just put up, co-workers said.

[One media source--I can't recall which one--said Sayers fired Perry after the latter “talked back” to him. What did he say, “I’ll f—k you up”? “I’ll put a cap in yo’ a—“?

According to NYPD Deputy Chief Christopher McCormack, in The Post, “Talking to some of the workers so far, they are saying he was a bit of a hothead. It [the dispute] was regarding respect for himself and the workers.”

According to racist, black thugs, anytime a white fails to submit to them, he is guilty of “disrespecting” them. They refuse to respect white authority figures, with the possible exception of those who are themselves relentlessly anti-white.]

Reached at her Long Island home, a woman who identified herself as Sayers' sister-in-law teared up as she described him as “such a good guy.”

“I wish there was a new adjective for how terrible this is,” she said. “He was 37. He had big plans.”

Co-workers described Sayers, of Plainview. L.I., as a quiet and well-liked boss who had a good rapport with his workers.

“Chris is one of the best guys,” said fellow worker Denis Greaves, 75. “He never gave nobody a hard time.”

Police on the scene on W. 59th St. near 11th Ave. after a gunman shot and killed a construction supervisor at an Upper West Side job site.
(Marcus Santos/New York Daily News)

Perry was arrested three times in the city. Two of the arrests were sealed [they were for assault, according to the Post]. The third was for a robbery in 1995, cops said.

Gayle said Perry’s wife committed suicide in 2015. While Perry was sleeping, she poured gasoline on her body and set herself on fire.

A neighbor who identified himself as Mike said Perry asked him to watch his dog, a pit bull named Bruno, because he was “going away to take care of something.”

Mike said he was confused when he left his house at 5 a.m. Thursday and saw Bruno tied to his railing.

The building under construction, Three Waterline Square, will boast 47 condos and 167 rental apartments. It’s expected to open near the end of next year.

The building is part of a massive Riverside Center redevelopment plan, expected to bring five residential towers to the area. The complex is expected to hold 2,500 apartments, 140,000 square feet of retail space, an elementary school and a hotel, according to Curbed.com.

With Roshan Abraham, Greg B. Smith, Marcus Santos

2 comments:

  1. What this delusional POS 'Ta Nehisi' wrote in his 'masterpiece' - 'Between the World and Me' - about the hundreds of firemen killed on 9/11, tells you everything you need to know about his prodigious intellect and impressive writing talents:
    “They were not human to me. Black, white, or whatever, they were menaces of nature; they were the fire, the comet, the storm, which could — with no justification — shatter my body.”
    Book reviewers were stumbling over themselves to praise this incoherent shit.
    (Quoted from: http://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2015/07/the-toxic-world-view-of-ta-nehisi-coates-120512).
    By the way, Coates was a 2015 'MacArthur ‘Genius Grant’ winner: a $625,000 no-strings-attached award given to “individuals who show exceptional creativity in their work and the prospect for still more in the future.”
    Now that's REAL 'Ghetto Lottery' money.

    ReplyDelete
  2. This is ONE OF THE REASONS why whites are reluctant to hire blacks.Besides utter stupidity,lack of effort and being untrustworthy around valuables and money,when they get fired--it's time to get whitey(ranging from assault to murder).
    It's so obvious that in normal circumstances,whites and blacks are not compatible.Criminal enterprises may yield some fake friendship--temporarily.You can never trust a black man,if you are white.Even before he committed murder,this fired black lied,"Oh no, I wouldn't do DAT."
    They subvert the white women they associate with,and hate the white guys they associate with.Actually,they hate all whites.
    They should just stay with their own race,their own neighborhoods.This experiment of integration will never succeed.
    --GR Anonymous

    ReplyDelete