One dead, one seriously injured after twin sisters stabbed in New York deli
Two 19-year-old twin sisters were attacked in a Brooklyn deli early Sunday, resulting in one fatality and the other being hospitalized, according to police and witnesses.
Samiya Spain succumbed to a chest stab wound, while her sister, yet to be identified, sustained a stab wound to her arm but is in stable condition.
The incident occurred around 2:20 a.m. at a deli in Park Slope, near Saint Mark's Place and 4th Avenue, close to Spain's residence on Nevins Street.
Police responded to find one sister with a chest stab wound and the other with an arm injury, both rushed to New York Presbyterian Brooklyn Methodist Hospital, where Spain was pronounced dead.
No arrests have been made, and the investigation is ongoing.
A witness, speaking anonymously to NBC New York, recounted an altercation initiated when a man made advances towards the sisters, which they rejected. The man then became aggressive and left the deli but returned shortly after, attempting to re-enter forcefully.
The witness detailed how the man attacked the sisters when the deli staff opened the door to confront him.
Alphonso Goodson, the girls' grandfather, revealed that the man had harassed the sisters after being rebuffed, leading to the confrontation.
Tony Herbert, a Democratic New York Assembly candidate for Brooklyn, advocated for stricter penalties for violent offenses during a news conference on Sunday, emphasizing the seriousness of brandishing a knife in such incidents.
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