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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
National
Brittany Kriegstein and Leonard Greene

Suspect in Tessa Majors' slaying got earful from uncle during police interrogation

NEW YORK _ The youngest suspect in the stabbing death of Barnard freshman Tessa Majors caught it from both sides during an interrogation after his arrest _ from detectives trying to put the pieces together, and from his angry uncle who berated him for being a "follower."

A day after two teens being charged as adults pleaded not guilty to murder and robbery charges, a third suspect appeared Thursday in family court, where prosecutors played a video of his police interrogation.

In it, the 13-year-old boy delivers a play-by-play of the Dec. 11 attack _ and gets an earful from his outraged uncle, who had warned him about hanging out with the wrong crowd.

The boy said he was looking on as his friends, Rashaun Weaver, 14, and Luciano Lewis, 14, attacked Majors in Morningside Park.

The suspect fingered Weaver as the stabber, saying that while he did not see Weaver plunge the knife into the victim, he did see feathers flying from her coat. Later, as they ran off, he said in the video, he picked up the knife and gave it back to Weaver after he dropped it on the street.

"Is that the knife that Rashaun used?" a detective asked.

"Yes," the boy answered.

"What color was that knife?"

"Red."

The boy said the murder weapon was different than the knife he had in his own backpack, which he said he was holding for a friend.

During a break from questioning at the precinct, but with the camera still rolling, the uncle lit into the boy about the knife and all the bad decisions that had gotten him into trouble.

"You don't see what you f------ got yourself into?" the uncle says. "Because you hanging out with the wrong f------ people, instead of bringing your ass home like you're supposed to. What do you have a f------ knife in your book bag for? Like I say, you shouldn't be letting anyone put anything in your bag. What did I tell you about being a follower? I told you about being a f------ follower."

The uncle then tries to explain the sobering reality of the situation.

"This ain't like school where you get a f------ suspension and you go somewhere else for like five days," the uncle says. "This ain't like that. All you need to do is go to f------ school and bring your ass home. F------ police record and every f------ thing."

The boy has been charged as a juvenile with murder, robbery and criminal possession of a weapon.

Tessa Majors was jogging down a set of steps in the park on W. 116th St. near Morningside Drive shortly before 7 p.m. when she was attacked.

The random murder of the promising student from Charlottesville, Va., who played in a band with her high school buddies, put the college campus and neighboring Harlem community on edge.

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