Pulse logo
Pulse Region
ADVERTISEMENT

Brooklyn Man Found Guilty in Murder of Jogger Karina Vetrano

NEW YORK — The young man had confessed to beating and strangling Karina Vetrano as she jogged in a Queens park nearly three years ago. Traces of his DNA were found on her neck and cellphone, and underneath her fingernails.
Brooklyn Man Found Guilty in Murder of Jogger Karina Vetrano
Brooklyn Man Found Guilty in Murder of Jogger Karina Vetrano

The evidence “overwhelmingly proves” that the man, Chanel Lewis, 22, is guilty beyond a reasonable doubt, a prosecutor told jurors Monday.

Lewis’s first trial, five months ago, had ended with a hung jury. Some jurors were swayed by defense arguments that Lewis’ confession was coerced and that the DNA evidence was contaminated.

But Monday, at his second trial, a different jury found Lewis guilty of murdering Vetrano, after a long legal saga that had raised questions about coerced confessions, racial profiling and police practices. The jurors also found him guilty of sexually assaulting her.

The killing of Vetrano, 30, was one of the most high-profile cases in the city in recent years, jarring for its apparent randomness. The prosecution of Lewis, who lived in Brooklyn, had prompted debate over social media, and in the courtroom. Some observers said the confession and DNA evidence were proof enough of Lewis’ guilt, while others argued that prosecutors had the wrong person.

Recommended For You
Kenya The New York Times entertainment
2024-08-20T09:16:46+00:00
Mixing memories of his North African childhood with his day-to-day life as a husband and father in New Haven, Connecticut, Ficre Ghebreyesus conjured up an imaginary space of his own. He created this multilayered world in his studio, where, after his sudden death at 50 in 2012, he left behind more than 700 paintings and several hundred works on paper. And he performed a similar magic in the popular Caffe Adulis, where he earned his living by cooking hybrid recipes that drew on the culinary he...
The Inventive Chef Who Kept His 700 Paintings Hidden

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

ADVERTISEMENT

Subscribe to receive daily news updates.