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Wednesday, 05/15/2002 9:48:52 AM

Wednesday, May 15, 2002 9:48:52 AM

Post# of 5976
K², picture of Jenny the women I went to high school with is at the New York post link at the bottom.

May 15, 2002 -- It was another battering day in court yesterday for loved ones of the Carnegie Deli Massacre's three murder victims - with trial evidence including gory crime-scene photos and a 911 tape that nearly made a juror cry.
The juror, a woman in her 40s, grimaced and rocked in her seat as a male voice on the tape called out scratchily, over wall speakers, in Manhattan Supreme Court.

It was survivor and star witness Anthony Veader, 37, pitifully telling a 911 dispatcher to rush help to the top-floor apartment above the Theater District's Carnegie Deli, where two armed robbers had shot five people, three of them fatally.

"I'm bleeding from the head and I'm losing a lot of blood!" Veader pleads into his cell phone as he lies on the living-room carpet. "Please, God!"

Meanwhile, victims' family members and friends - enough to fill three rows of benches - listened along, with many of the women holding their hands to their faces.

They'd seen police photos of the blood-and-brains-soaked carpet earlier in the day - Day Two of testimony in the murder trial of the two alleged killers.

One photo showed how cops had retrieved a bullet by peeling back first the stained purple carpet, then the white linoleum, and finally the wooden floorboards. The bullet had passed through the body of an unnamed victim and was crushed nearly flat.

Another photo showed the bodies of the two men who were murdered, Stephen King, 32, and Charles Helliwell, 36. They'd lain dead or dying at Veader's side as he called 911.

"It was terrible to see how tightly they'd been bound, with so much tape," said Michelle Cramer, of Carroll Gardens, Brooklyn - a friend of the third murder victim, Jennifer Stahl, 39, whose apartment it was.

Prosecutors say the murder defendants, Sean Salley, 30, and Andre Smith, 31, came to the apartment last May - where Stahl sold marijuana for 10 years - to rob her of drugs and cash. Prosecutors were led to the two by fingerprint and hallway surveillance-video evidence.

Still, there was one moment of humor yesterday. Another crime-scene photo showed the two large pieces of posterboard on which Stahl had handwritten her marijuana price list - and the rules of her business.

"MENU," it began in large, block letters, decorated on either side with drawings of marijuana leaves in green marker.

A brand she called "White Widow" was listed at $640 an ounce. "Indica" went for $320 an ounce, and "Mex" for $240 an ounce.

"Sorry, No Discounts," the boards read. "No New Clients," they continued. Then, at the bottom, came the line that made Stahl's friends in the courtroom smile fondly.

"Motherf - - - ers," it said with Stahl's trademark sass. "Follow the rules."

"It was just so like Jennifer," longtime friend Katya Surrence, a dancer from Midtown Manhattan, remembered warmly.

For much of the day, though, science, not drama, dominated. Two police forensics experts told jurors of their meticulous sifting of evidence. Even pipes and water samples from the bathroom and kitchen sinks were sent out for DNA tests - in case the murderers had been injured or rinsed their bloodied hands.

The forensic testimony continues when the trial resumes tomorrow.
http://www.nypost.com/news/regionalnews/48000.htm

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