Current:Home > InvestNYC officials announce hate crime charge in stabbing death of gay dancer O'Shae Sibley -Quantum Capital Pro
NYC officials announce hate crime charge in stabbing death of gay dancer O'Shae Sibley
View
Date:2025-04-13 03:05:10
A teenager was arrested and charged with murder as a hate crime in the stabbing death of O'Shae Sibley, a gay man who was fatally stabbed in a confrontation at a Brooklyn gas station, authorities said Saturday.
Police said Sibley, a 28-year-old professional choreographer, was stabbed to death July 29 after the confrontation between a group of friends dancing to a Beyoncé song and another group of young men who taunted them with derogatory slurs.
A 17-year-old suspect, who wasn't named, was in custody and was facing a charge of murder in the second degree, charged as a hate crime, and criminal possession of a weapon, the New York Police Department announced at a news conference Saturday.
Sibley's death has drawn national attention and outrage among New York City's LGBTQ community after authorities said they were investigating the case as a possible hate crime. Beyoncé and filmmaker Spike Lee both paid tribute to Sibley online.
Sibley and a group of friends were at a Brooklyn gas station and dancing to music playing from a car when they were approached by another group of young men who told them to stop dancing and "harassed" them, according to Joseph Kenny, assistant chief of the Detective Bureau.
Kenny said investigators interviewed witnesses and looked at video footage to determine that the group, including the suspect, used "derogatory" language, including homophobic and anti-Black slurs against Sibley and his friends.
Kenny said the groups had a verbal confrontation that turned physical and lasted for about four minutes. The suspect and Sibley "come together" in conflict before the suspect retreated while "striking" Sibley once in the chest, Kenny said. The suspect then fled.
Mayor Eric Adams said Sibley's life was lost to something "clearly that was a hate crime."
'REST IN POWER':Beyoncé, Spike Lee pay tribute to O'Shae Sibley, stabbed while dancing
Sibley, from Philadelphia, performed with the dance company Philadanco. He was also part of the New York City house and ballroom LGBTQ culture, according to Lee Soulja Simmons, executive director of the New York City Center for Black Pride.
"We wrestle with this death. We wrestle with hate crimes. We wrestle with people in our community constantly facing discrimination not just because you're Black but because you represent LGBT," Simmons said Saturday. "He did not deserve to die in that way."
One witness of the confrontation, Summy Ullah, said in interviews that the people in conflict with Sibley's group complained that Sibley and his friends' behavior offended them as Muslims. Some leaders of the area's Muslim community condemned the slaying.
“The weight of this loss is felt deeply, not just by the family and friends of O’Shae, but by all of us who value life, peace and justice," Soniya Ali, the executive director of the Muslim Community Center, said Saturday.
Contributing: The Associated Press
veryGood! (6937)
Related
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Coal Ash Is Contaminating Groundwater in at least 22 States, Utility Reports Show
- Idaho militia leader Ammon Bundy is due back in court. But will he show up?
- New York AG: Exxon Climate Fraud Investigation Nearing End
- Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
- The Largest Arctic Science Expedition in History Finds Itself on Increasingly Thin Ice
- Coal’s Decline Not Hurting Power Grid Reliability, Study Says
- FDA approves Opill, the first daily birth control pill without a prescription
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- Politicians want cop crackdowns on drug dealers. Experts say tough tactics cost lives
Ranking
- Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
- When Trump’s EPA Needed a Climate Scientist, They Called on John Christy
- Florida woman who shot Black neighbor through door won't face murder charge
- Emissions of Nitrous Oxide, a Climate Super-Pollutant, Are Rising Fast on a Worst-Case Trajectory
- Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
- National Governments Are Failing on Clean Energy in All but 3 Areas, IEA says
- Malaria cases in Florida and Texas are first locally acquired infections in U.S. in 20 years, CDC warns
- Montana bridge collapse sends train cars into Yellowstone River, prompting federal response
Recommendation
The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
Jana Kramer Recalls Releasing Years of Shame After Mike Caussin Divorce
As Solar and Wind Prices Fall, Coal’s Future is Fading Fast, BNEF Says
Matty Healy Leaves a Blank Space on Where He Stands With Taylor Swift
How to watch the 'Blue Bloods' Season 14 finale: Final episode premiere date, cast
New federal rules will limit miners' exposure to deadly disease-causing dust
'Forever chemicals' could be in nearly half of U.S. tap water, a federal study finds
Could Dairy Cows Make Up for California’s Aliso Canyon Methane Leak?