The stabbing death of a man in a Harlem bodega thatโs getting national media attention may not end up as a murder case at all, at least according to a group supporting the man charged in the incident.
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The United Bodegas of America, a trade group, met with Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg Jr. about the case yesterday and they claim that Bragg says he โabsolutelyโ is considering dropping murder charges against Jose Alba, the New York Post reports.
Bragg has been barraged from all sides, including by Mayor Eric Adams, for charging Alba with the rap even though surveillance video clearly shows the Manhattan worker being attacked by an ex-con, whom the clerk ended up stabbing in alleged self-defense.
The United Bodegas of Americaโs closed-door sit-down with Bragg at his Manhattan office was โvery, very good,โ with the DA telling the group that Alba, 61, could see charges against him dropped, said Fernando Mateo, the groupโs rep, after the huddle.
โWe felt very good because his tone was very soothing. His demeanor was very direct, and he said, โI donโt understand why people are jumping to conclusions. I have not made a determination. I am investigating,โโ Mateo recalled Bragg saying when asked about Albaโs case.
โI asked, โDo the possibilities exist that you will drop these charges?โ And he said, โAbsolutely.โโ
Alba stabbed 34-year-old Austin Simon to death on July 1 at the Blue Moon bodega in Harlem. The storeโs security cameras recorded the incident which started with an altercation between Simonโs girlfriend and Alba, after which Simon enters the store and attackโs Alba before he is stabbed. Alba was also stabbed by Simonโs companion in the incident.
Braggโs office has charged Alba with murder and he was initially locked up in New Yorkโs notorious Rikerโs Island jail until earlier this week after his bail was reduced.
The bodega group is the same one that this week advocated for a Stand Your Ground law in New York, which I wrote yesterday is an absolutely terrible idea that probably wouldnโt gain much traction in either New Yorkโs state legislature or New York City Council anyway.
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