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Magic407- 03-20-2006

Last Call What the bartender saw the night Imette St. Guillen was drinking at the Falls. By Chris Faherty I know it sounds cliché, but it was just like any other Friday night at the Falls. I was in the weeds by eleven. It was wall-to-wall by midnight. At quarter after three, I was splitting the tips with Rebecca, the other bartender. By 3:45, I’d closed in on the finish line—the organization of a small mountain of credit-card slips—when I decided to take a bathroom break. The bar was close to empty, but en route, I noticed one of the last patrons: She was sitting alone at the far end of the twenty-foot oak bar, very erect in her chair. I remember thinking how strange it was to see a dainty little girl sitting alone at the bar, talking to no one. But I had a routine, business to finish. The last chore was in the basement. At around 4 a.m., as I was counting my drop in the office below, the girl, like any other patron at closing time, was asked to leave and escorted out by the doorman. Later that day, the dead body of Imette St. Guillen was found in an abandoned field in East New York. I met Darryl Littlejohn three months ago, when he was hired as a doorman. But I didn’t know him by that name; I knew him only as “B.” I was outside grabbing a quick smoke, sparking up some conversation with Kwan, our regular bouncer, who introduced us. I asked the obvious question: What does B stand for? “Brother,” Kwan replied, smiling. “He’s my brother.” Kwan was six-four and built; B was five-seven but broad-shouldered, with a back that engulfed his body like a turtle’s shell. He wore clear-lensed wraparound glasses and military garb, which added to his intimidating presence. Obviously not related by blood, they claimed to be partners: federal marshals who hunted fugitives by day and moonlighted together at night. The two of them would stroll into work sporting what we all thought were their clothes from the day job: fatigues tucked into combat boots, bulletproof vests, handcuffs dangling from their belts, and U.S. marshal caps and T-shirts. They even had shiny gold badges. When it was slow, I would hang out with Kwan and B while they checked I.D.’s. Kwan, unlike his quiet partner, had the gift of gab. He would wax poetic about their exploits. Prisoner transports were probably my favorites, but I also enjoyed the occasional house-raid story. There was a great one involving guns ablaze at a bust in the Midwest. I was the fun Irish bartender who made them laugh with my corny jokes and wet their whistles at the end of the night with snifters of Hennessy. If anyone ever bothered me, B and Kwan were my protection. And I wasn’t the only one who bought their act. Tim, the other bouncer, hated to work with cops; and the manager, Danny Dorrian, truly believed that since B and Kwan were the law, their presence made the Falls a safer place. It wasn’t until Wednesday that St. Guillen’s credit card was traced to the Falls. The following Saturday, I was working with B again. Kwan wasn’t at his shift; he had been on vacation since before St. Guillen was murdered. It was just as well. Business was a disaster. At about one—usually the height of the craziness—B, my fellow bartender Andy, and I were sitting at the bar, watching the police lights flash through the windows. We were in a gallows mood, joking and bitching about the media clowns camped outside. At one point, I looked B directly in the eyes and said, in jest, “The cops asked me for your phone number.” Andy picked up on the joke: “Actually, they’re looking for yours, Chris!” B just looked at us and shook his head in disgust. Throughout the rest of the evening, B and I exchanged several more glances, all of which culminated in the same gesture. The cops didn’t contact me until Sunday morning, eight days after the murder. When I finally got the visit, a detective loaded me into an unmarked tan police car and brought me to the 75th Precinct for questioning: “Welcome to East New York, the armpit of America,” he said. I spent the next ten hours in a concrete room with a dwarf-size bench and a pinned-up notice of the new juvenile-interrogation procedures. I dined on some suspect Chinese food and paced myself through a two-day-old Newsday. At 10 p.m., they shuffled me in to give a taped statement. Two detectives and the assistant D.A. asked me to go over the entire evening in detail. There was one uncomfortable moment: I told the interrogator about B and Kwan’s exploits as U.S. marshals, and the assistant D.A. just glared at me, like I was the last kid in the family to hear about Mom and Dad’s divorce. Then I was asked to give a DNA sample: It was a relief to rub that cotton swab across the inside of my cheek and finally be done with it. Afterward, I was ushered to a metal folding chair to join Tim and Andy outside the detectives’ office. We were waiting for Felix, the porter, to make his statement before we could hitch a ride back to Manhattan. When I sat down next to Tim, he turned to me and said, “The cops think B did it.” Holy shit. It was like a Joe Frazier right hook. When the pain faded, I just felt like a patsy. Someone had slipped a magical moron pill into my soup. I was conned, we all were, by Kwan—who never came back from his vacation—and his “brother,” Darryl Littlejohn. I still work at the Falls. A lot of my job involves deflecting the media (“No comment . . . It’s an ongoing police investigation . . . No, I can’t give you my name”) and answering the phones. We get a lot of crank calls: “When is that nigger Darryl coming in?” But the most disturbing is the old lady who sits on the line slowly chanting “killers, killers, killers” in a raspy voice. http://www.nymetro.com/news/intelligencer/16478/

Magic407- 03-22-2006

Indictment Could Come Soon For Darryl Littlejohn A grand jury has been weighing evidence for several days linking the SoHo bouncer to the murder of 24-year-old John Jay grad student Imette St. Guillen, and an indictment could happen in the coming days. Littlejohn is being held on Rikers Island on a parole violation as the grand jury reviews his case. Police say blood on the plastic ties used to bind St. Guillen's hands matches Littlejohn. Littlejohn worked as a bouncer at the Falls Bar in SoHo where St. Guillen was last seen alive. Her body was found off the Belt Parkway hours later, wrapped in a blanket with her faced covered in packing tape. http://www.ny1.com/ny1/content/index.jsp?stid=1&aid=57969

Magic407- 03-22-2006

N.Y. Bouncer Indicted In Grad Student's Slaying Ex-Con Last Person Seen With Slain Grad Student POSTED: 2:55 pm EST March 22, 2006 UPDATED: 6:39 pm EST March 22, 2006 BOSTON -- A law enforcement official said Wednesday a bouncer with a long rap sheet has been indicted in the vicious rape and strangulation death of a New York City grad student. The official said the sealed indictment charges Darryl Littlejohn in the death of Imette St. Guillen, whose body was dumped in a desolate area of Brooklyn last month. The St. Guillen family headed to New York on Wednesday in preparation for the expected Littlejohn arraignment. St. Guillen, 24, was found strangled, suffocated and raped on Feb. 25, her body dumped in an abandoned Brooklyn field. Police questioned the 41-year-old ex-convict, Littlejohn, in connection with the slaying. Investigators said Littlejohn's DNA was found on the plastic ties that were used to bind St. Guillen's wrists. Maureen St. Guillen, the victim's mother, left her home in Boston's Mission Hill neighborhood Wednesday morning, suitcases stowed in a car by family members. All she would say is that she wished "my baby was home." She was accompanied by her daughter Alejandra and son, Lou. The arraignment could come as soon as Thursday. Imette St. Guillen was a Boston Latin graduate who went on to attend Georgetown University. She was earning her master's degree in criminal justice at John Jay College in Manhattan at the time of her death. Littlejohn has been held in Riker's Island jail on parole violations for working late hours at the trendy SoHo bar where Imette St. Guillen was last seen. Littlejohn's first brush with the law came at age 17, when he robbed someone with a shotgun. Over the years, he was convicted on drug and gun charges using names like Darryl Banks, John Handsome and Jonathan Blaze - the name of a comic book character. http://www.local6.com/news/8189979/detail.html

Gaia- 03-23-2006

Bloody nose likely DNA source By Michele McPhee Thursday, March 23, 2006 - Updated: 08:10 AM EST NEW YORK - A history of nose bleeds could explain why Darryl Littlejohn’s blood was found smeared on the plastic bindings used to tie up murder victim Imette St. Guillen, a law enforcement said last night, hours after the career criminal was indicted and charged in her macabre murder. The career criminal accused of killing the Boston native claimed in a TV report aired last night that the absence of wounds on his body should raise questions about the blood allegedly containing his DNA found on plastic straps that bound St. Guillen’s wrists. But a law enforcement source said jailed suspect Darryl Littlejohn is prone to nose bleeds, easily account for the evidence. He is charged with first-degree murder, kidnapping, and unlawful imprisonment. In a jail interview with WCBS-TV, Littlejohn, 41, denied killing St. Guillen and said police “have the wrong person.” He said he was asked to escort St. Guillen out of The Falls bar, where she was drinking, just before closing; his attorney did not allow him to be questioned about what happened next. Littlejohn said he had provided a DNA sample when asked. “I cooperated fully, even before I was placed under arrest,” he told WCBS for the interview, which was conducted on Tuesday and aired last night. Asked whether he killed St. Guillen, he said, “No, I did not.” The longtime felon was working as a bouncer at The Falls, the Soho nightspot where St. Guillen was last seen alive on the morning of Feb. 25. “We’re grateful he was finally charged. We want this part to be over with so we can begin grieving,” said Boston Police officer Luke Holbrook, who considered St. Guillen a sister. His father, Frank, is the longtime companion of the victim’s mother, Maureen St. Guillen, and helped raise Imette and her older sister Alejandra. Police also recovered carpet fibers from Littlejohn’s Queens home that matched threads recovered from brown packing tape that completely swathed St. Guillens face. Investigators said she had been sexually assaulted in a way that was not human and that Littlejohn stuffed a white gym sock down her throat and bound her hands behind her back with the ties; her ankles were tied with shoelaces. Just after 7 p.m. yesterday, Littlejohn was brought out of Rikers Island and fingerprinted at the 75th Precinct in Brooklyn - not far from the gruesome scene where St. Guillen’s body was found after an anonymous caller dialed 911 from a nearby payphone roughly 17 hours after she was last seen standing outside The Falls with Littlejohn. Among the spectators in the courtroom at Littlejohn’s arraignment today will be St. Guillens and the Holbrook family, along with another BPD officer who traveled with the family to New York City for support. Littlejohn insisted in his TV interview that police have the wrong man. “It’ll be so easy to play the race thing, or what-have-you. But, I’m a likely suspect because I have a criminal background and I wasn’t supposed tobe there working,” Littlejohn told a CBS reporter. http://news.bostonherald.com/stGuillenMurder/view.bg?articleid=131765&format=&page=2

Magic407- 03-23-2006

Bouncer Expected To Plead Not Guilty In Grad Student Slaying March 23, 2006 The lawyer for bouncer Darryl Littlejohn says his client will plead not guilty to the murder and rape of grad student Imette St. Guillen at his arraingment Thursday. Littlejohn is awaiting arraignment at Brooklyn Criminal Court after a grand jury voted Wednesday to indict him on charges of first-degree murder and rape. Police considered Littlejohn the prime suspect in the murder after they said physical and DNA evidence linked him to the body and murder scene. But Littlejohn insists he didn't do it. In a television interview from Rikers Island, he said he has been cooperating with the police investigation all along. He also said he can see how police would consider him a likely suspect because of his criminal background, along with the fact that he wasn't supposed to be working as a bouncer as part of his parole terms. Littlejohn worked as a bouncer at the Falls Bar in SoHo and was seen ushering St. Guillen out of the bar the morning she vanished. His lawyer says there's nothing wrong or unusual about that. "He said that he walked her out of the bar at the end of the night. He's not hiding from that,” said Littlejohn’s lawyer Kevin O’Donnell. “He was doing his job and at the end of the night when the bar was closing, his job was to make sure that the bar was empty. And he walked her out and that's the last he saw of her." Her body was found later that night in a weed-filled lot off the Belt Parkway. She'd been raped, her hands and feet were bound, and her face was wrapped in packing tape. St. Guillen's mother and siblings left their Boston home Wednesday to come to New York for the arraignment. http://www.ny1.com/ny1/content/index.jsp?stid=1&aid=58034

Gaia- 03-23-2006

Bouncer Pleads Not Guilty in Rape, Slaying Thursday, March 23, 2006 A bouncer pleaded not guilty Thursday in the gruesome rape and murder of a graduate student in a "CSI"-style case built on such forensic evidence as blood, rabbit fur, rug fibers and cell phone records. Darryl Littlejohn, 41, was charged in the slaying of Imette St. Guillen, a 24-year-old student at John Jay College of Criminal Justice in Manhattan. Brooklyn prosecutors have "never seen a case where there has been so much forensic evidence as the foundation of a case," said District Attorney Charles Hynes. Littlejohn, a parolee with a long criminal history, has steadfastly denied any involvement in the slaying. St. Guillen's body was found dumped in a desolate section of Brooklyn on Feb. 25. A white athletic sock was stuffed in her mouth and her head was wrapped with packing tape. She was last seen alive early that morning at a SoHo bar where Littlejohn worked as a bouncer. A manager at the bar told police that Littlejohn escorted St. Guillen out after closing time, and that he heard the pair arguing. Investigators said DNA evidence links Littlejohn to blood found on ties that were used to bind St. Guillen's hands. Also, fibers discovered on the tape on the victim's head were consistent with those from a rug and two fur-collared jackets from the defendant's apartment, Police Commissioner Ray Kelly said. Investigators said they found mink and rabbit fur on the tape. "This is an unusual finding, put it that way," Kelly said. "Two jackets. A rabbit collar and a mink collar." Investigators also said that Littlejohn's phone was used to make a call from near the spot where the body was dumped, an hour before it was discovered. If convicted, Littlejohn faces life in prison without parole. Outside court Thursday, defense attorney Kevin O'Donnell told reporters his client maintains his innocence. After the hearing, St. Guillen's sister wept as she read a statement thanking police for their efforts. St. Guillen was from Boston. "New York was Imette's home," Alejandra St. Guillen said. "She loved the city and its people ... Imette was a good person, a kind person. Her heart was full of love. With Imette's death, the world lost someone very special too soon." http://www.baynews9.com/content/36/2006/3/23/150225.html

Magic407- 03-26-2006

A keen eye for clues Expert cracked the case BY NANCIE L. KATZ DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER From the moment the NYPD crime lab received the physical evidence recovered from the body of slain graduate student Imette St. Guillen, top forensic expert Nicholas Petraco was on the case. In fact, the grand jury testimony of Petraco, a retired NYPD criminologist who now works as a consultant to the department, was key to charging bouncer Darryl Littlejohn with her murder, the Daily News has learned. Even before police searched Littlejohn's Queens apartment on March 6, Petraco and a team of crime lab technicians had spent days examining "trace transfer evidence" from the tape and blanket found on St. Guillen's body. At a news conference to announce Littlejohn's indictment, Brooklyn District Attorney Charles Hynes said forensic evidence played an unprecedented role in linking Littlejohn, a 41-year-old ex-con, to the murder of St. Guillen, 24, a student of CUNY's John Jay College of Criminal Justice. "There will be a course on this in law schools," Hynes said. NYPD Commissioner Raymond Kelly said fibers from a blue rabbit fur collar, a brown mink fur collar coat and a red polyester carpet in Littlejohn's apartment were "consistent" with those found on the packing tape that sealed St. Guillen's face. Such forensic evidence placed St. Guillen in Littlejohn's home, Hynes said. According to John Jay Prof. Thomas Kubic, Petraco's co-author on crime scene investigations books, the nationally recognized forensic expert has spent days in the NYPD's crime lab with at least a half-dozen specialists peering through stereo microscopes and spectrophotometers to pinpoint fibers to the most minuscule detail. "Once they start seeing things on the tape, they make a list of the important things they've seen," Kubic said. "They pick these things off and label the containers. It's very exacting and tedious work." "It's very difficult to clean your house of everything that may have transferred," he added. Kubic, who is not involved in the case, said Petraco would not comment out of concern it would undermine the criminal probe. Only 20% of the forensic evidence had been analyzed so far, according to Hynes, leaving open the possibility of another suspect. So far, there are no witnesses to St. Guillen's murder and Littlejohn denies involvement. Originally published on March 26, 2006 http://www.nydailynews.com/news/crime_file/story/403053p-341380c.html

Magic407- 03-26-2006

IMETTE BARMAN SPEAKS By C.J. SULLIVAN and LUKAS I. ALPERT March 26, 2006 -- With his family's name popping up in connection to the murder of a young woman once again, The Falls owner Michael Dorrian is insisting he and his family are not to blame. "I run a decent bar and this incident didn't take place here. Littlejohn is the one they need to look at," he told The Post in his first interview since Imette St. Guillen disappeared after leaving his bar last month. But the weekly protests outside The Falls bar are clearly getting under his skin. "I wish they'd just leave me alone. They have no business out here," he said. "These are not even neighborhood people." A message left with a spokesman for the St. Guillen family was not returned yesterday. For three weeks in a row, protesters have gathered outside the SoHo watering hole where St. Guillen was last seen alive. They've been demanding the state revoke the bar's liquor license for hiring Littlejohn, the ex-con bouncer charged in her killing. Critics have also pointed to several lawsuits alleging violent assaults on patrons by bouncers at Dorrian bars across the city, and a long list of State Liquor Authority violations, patterns that were revealed by The Post two weeks ago. The protests have had little effect, so far. The SLA postponed an investigation into the bar until the criminal probe is complete, but the bar's business has been slow. Only about a dozen patrons were in The Falls Friday night - a fraction of the usual weekend crowd before St. Guillen was killed. It marks the second time in 20 years that a bar owned by the Dorrian family figured into a high-profile slaying. Dorrian's Red Hand was the last stop for Jennifer Levin before she was brutally beaten in Central Park by Robert Chambers in the notorious 1986 "Preppie Murder." Littlejohn was the last to be seen with St. Guillen alive after Michael Dorrian's brother, Danny, ordered the burly bouncer to escort her out of the pub at closing time on Feb. 25. Her naked body was found 17 hours later wrapped in a cheap floral-print blanket and dumped in a weed-choked lot in a desolate corner of East New York. Littlejohn has stuck by his claim that she walked off on her own after he took her out of the bar. But Danny Dorrian told police he heard the two argue outside, and two homeless people say they saw him get into his van with her and drive off. Cellphone records put him in the area of the dumping ground 11/2 hours before her body was found. lukas.alpert@nypost.com http://www.nypost.com/news/regionalnews/63628.htm

Magic407- 03-27-2006

Lawyer in limelight Bouncer's att'y has new high profile BY SCOTT SHIFREL DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER The lawyer charged with defending the man accused of one of the most infamous murders in recent city history was a little-known Queens defender - until this month. Now Kevin O'Donnell's face is nearly as familiar to the public as that of his client, Darryl Littlejohn - the ex-con bouncer charged with first-degree murder in the vicious Feb. 25 slaying of student Imette St. Guillen. "I've been on Anderson Cooper three times, 'Good Morning America,' Greta , Rita , Larry ," O'Donnell said, ticking off a list of TV appearances. "Anderson Cooper said, 'Your life is about to change.' It already has." O'Donnell, 44, a former model and actor who cage-dives with sharks in the waters off Africa, was dealing with robberies and assaults on March 9 when he was tapped to represent Littlejohn for the suspect's lineup. The 6-foot-3 former Queens prosecutor has used the media forum to chastise police for leaks and ask for a fair shake for his client. So far, he's gotten better reviews than he did when modeling in Europe, tending his father's bar in Times Square or doing odd jobs during the 11 years he took to get through Fordham University as an undergraduate and a law student. "He handled himself with a lot of aplomb," said Mark Geragos, a well-known California defense lawyer. "He was saying all the right things. Everybody needs a breakout case. Maybe this is his." The Bronx-born O'Donnell always wanted to be a lawyer, even if the fun-loving sportsman in him meant he took his time getting serious. He was 31 when he notched his law degree. O'Donnell has defended accused murderers before, but they all pleaded out. Representing Littlejohn - whom authorities contend is linked to St. Guillen's slaying by forensic evidence and witness accounts - is clearly the challenge of his legal career. He exudes confidence as he pals around with prosecutors, judges and court officers, all of whom tease him about his newfound fame. "I got more of an education tending bar than in formal school," O'Donnell said. "I know how to deal with people." Still, he was criticized by some for allowing a TV reporter to interview Littlejohn from jail last week as the 41-year-old suspect was about to be indicted. "The person I've been dealing with is a soft-spoken, intelligent man," O'Donnell said. "I wanted the public to see Darryl. "I don't care what anybody says. I'm going to do what's best for my client." Originally published on March 27, 2006 http://www.nydailynews.com/news/crime_file/story/403279p-341574c.html

Magic407- 04-02-2006

Sis thanks New Yorkers for Imette award effort BY ALISON GENDAR DAILY NEWS POLICE BUREAU CHIEF Grateful to New Yorkers for their generosity, Imette St. Guillen's sister said the permanent scholarship set up to honor her slain sister, a graduate student at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, is a fitting tribute. "This is an invaluable way to honor her, and to live out her dream through others," Alejandra St. Guillen said. Nearly $107,000 has been donated to the scholarship, but another $143,000 is needed. The Daily News joined John Jay, CUNY and the Association for a Better New York in launching the $250,000 drive. The money will endow an annual scholarship for a second-year student in the criminal justice master's degree program at John Jay. Imette St. Guillen, 24, was attending the school when she was brutally murdered Feb. 25. Organizers hope to reach the fund-raising goal by April 7, when a memorial will be held for St. Guillen at the college. The first scholarship recipient could be chosen later this spring. "We will be looking for someone who follows in her footsteps - the way she lived her life. She wanted to make the world better, that was her passion," said John Jay College President Jeremy Travis. The St. Guillen sisters learned the value of scholarships when they each won Carol DiMaiti Stuart awards in Boston. Stuart had been murdered in 1989 and her husband blamed the killing on a black man. That allegation led to racial dragnets in the hunt for a suspect - until Stuart's husband was arrested for the crime. Stuart's family, horrified by the racial unrest, created a scholarship for talented students in the Mission Hill neighborhood that bore the brunt of the suspicion. "I won the scholarship in 1994 and Imette in 1999," Alejandra St. Guillen said. "We met the Stuart family, and each time we opened the check and read the name, we thought about her, about what her family hoped to accomplish with the scholarship," she said. "It is a chance to keep her name alive." To donate to the scholarship, make your check payable to: John Jay College Foundation, Imette St. Guillen Scholarship Fund. Send it to John Jay College of Criminal Justice, 899 10th Ave., New York, N.Y. 10019. Originally published on April 2, 2006 http://www.nydailynews.com/news/crime_file/story/405114p-343088c.html

Gaia- 04-08-2006

Smiles & tears for Imette 300 gather at John Jay for memorial BY ALISON GENDAR and LEO STANDORA DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITERS Nearly 300 friends of murdered graduate student Imette St. Guillen gathered at John Jay College of Criminal Justice in Manhattan last night to share their memories of the beloved young woman who touched so many lives. Praising the Boston-born student as "one of the treasures of our college," John Jay President Jeremy Travis stressed that the gathering was called to celebrate St. Guillen's life as much as to mourn her loss. Her big sister, Alejandra, brought sad smiles to faces in the audience as she remembered her sibling as always "laughing and loving ... and from the time she was 15 or 16, always looking perfect." "She just couldn't believe her older sister would go out in public in ugly flip-flops." Alejandra struggled to keep her composure but broke into tears when she told those in Lynch Theater she tried to find a poem to dedicate to her sister but couldn't find one to capture a spirit "so wonderful, so beautiful." St. Guillen, 24, vanished early in the morning of Feb. 25 after a night of drinking that ended at The Falls bar in SoHo. Her nude body was found that night in Brooklyn. Darryl Littlejohn, a 41-year-old ex-con who worked as a bouncer at The Falls, has been charged with her murder. Friend Julie Iacono recalled how St. Guillen "taught me how to love New York. not a single memory I have of her where she is not smiling." Others spoke of St. Guillen's uncanny ability to make friends and bring people together and of her oft-spoken-of love of her family. Her mother, Maureen, spoke proudly of her daughter as "a beautiful and loving person who dedicated herself to helping others." To honor St. Guillen, family members said they were working to make a scholarship fund launched by John Jay, CUNY, the Association for a Better New York and the Daily News a success. The John Jay student council voted yesterday to donate $50,000 from its account to the fund, bringing contributions so far to $159,000. The goal is $250,000. Yesterday's memorial ended with the Songs of Solomon Inspirational Ensemble singing the spiritual "This Little Light of Mine" while photos of St. Guillen from childhood to college flashed on a big screen. The music ended with a large photo of St. Guillen smiling down at the audience, leaving the room in silence for a full three minutes save for muffled sobs. Originally published on April 8, 2006 http://www.nydailynews.com/front/story/407125p-344637c.html

Gaia- 04-08-2006

MY PAL IMETTE April 8, 2006 -- Imette St. Guillen's best friend - who left her outside a Bowery bar shortly before she disappeared in February - said at an emotional memorial service last night that the slain grad student would always be with her. "For 12 years Imette was my best friend, my partner in crime and a part of my family," said Claire Higgins, keeping her composure throughout the tearful service. "She will always be a part of me." Classmates, friends and relatives attended the service at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, where Higgins also read the E.E. Cummings poem "I Carry Your Heart With Me." Higgins last waved goodbye to her friend outside the Pioneer Bar on the Bowery at about 3:30 a.m. on Feb. 25, when St. Guillen refused to get in a cab with her. The John Jay honors student said she wanted to have one more drink - and headed to The Falls bar, where cops say she met the bouncer who has been charged with her murder. St. Guillen's mom, Maureen, also spoke, declaring that "we will be working very hard to obtain justice in every way possible." Maureen heard John Jay President Jeremy Travis praise her daughter as "one of the treasures of our college." The Boston native came to New York in August 2004 to study forensic psychology at John Jay. In February she was savagely raped and strangled after a night on the town. Last month, ex-con bouncer Darryl Littlejohn was charged with the slaying. St. Guillen's sister Alejandra brought many in the audience to tears yesterday when she asked, "Whoever had a sister so wonderful, a sister so giving, a sister so beautiful like I had?" "One day, little sister, one day we'll be . . . together again." John Jay is setting up a scholarship in her name and so far has raised $159,000. The student government donated $50,000 of that amount. john.mazor@nypost.com http://www.nypost.com/news/regionalnews/66702.htm

Magic407- 04-09-2006

IMETTE: I BLAME SOCIETY & NOT KILLERS By HEATHER GILMORE April 9, 2006 -- Just 15 days before she was brutally slain, Imette St. Guillen wrote of her compassion and understanding for juvenile killers - blaming poor education and rising unemployment for a troubling rise in homicide in Boston, her hometown. "I strongly believe that the reason for the increase in juvenile homicide in Boston during the past 15 years stems not from criminal justice policies and programs but from a lack of job opportunities for young people, a poor public school system . . . and from an increase in living expenses without a comparable increase in wages," the 24-year-old grad student wrote. "The gap between the middle class and the lower class is increasing, and I believe this causes tension amongst and within communities," she wrote. St. Guillen posted her assignment Feb. 10 on a John Jay College electronic class discussion board. On Feb. 25, the always-smiling stunner was raped and murdered, and her body was dumped in an empty lot along the Belt Parkway in Brooklyn. "This says a lot about the type of person she was," said classmate and friend David Speal, who spoke at a memorial at the West Side college Friday night. Speal, 24, works to help inmates make the transition from prison to the outside world. "Imette was so kind and caring . . . She has made me so much more committed, she has taught me so much," he said. Darryl Littlejohn, 41, a bouncer at The Falls, a SoHo bar, was charged with her murder. Blood found on the plastic ties that bound St. Guillen's wrist matched his DNA. In the class forum on "Public Policy and Juvenile Homicide in Boston," St. Guillen said it was society and not solely the killer to blame for their lives of crime. "If I was to make one recommendation, it would be the following: We, as a society, need to spend more money, resources, and time to the welfare and education of young people starting at an early age," she wrote. "I am not trying to negate other factors, such as police tactics and drugs contribute to the change in crime rates (of course they do) but I think it is time to take preventative steps by way of education." heather.gilmore@nypost.com http://www.nypost.com/news/regionalnews/64232.htm

Magic407- 04-09-2006

Report: DNA links Littlejohn to another sex attack Eyewitness News (New York-WABC, April 9, 2006) - A DNA match has reportedly linked Darryl Littlejohn to another sexual assault. This time it involves the rape of a young woman in Queens. According to the New York Daily News, the main suspect in the Imette Saint Guillen murder case could face charges for the separate Queens assault as early as this week. The attack happened in October. The former bouncer has been suspected of at least three other sex attacks in Queens and Nassau County. Littlejohn is charged with first degree murder in the Saint Guillen case and has pleaded not guilty. http://abclocal.go.com/wabc/story?section=local&id=4069857

Magic407- 04-10-2006

NUDE PHOTO ON BOUNCER CELLPHONE By LARRY CELONA and DAN MANGAN April 10, 2006 -- Cops have discovered a photo of the lower half of a naked woman on accused killer Darryl Littlejohn's cellphone - and are trying to find out if she is one of the women the bouncer is suspected of sexually assaulting, The Post has learned. That photo - along with numerous others of clothed women - is on the same phone that has implicated Littlejohn in the February sex slaying of grad student Imette St. Guillen, according to sources. The naked woman, who was photographed in Littlejohn's apartment, is not believed to be St. Guillen. Her body was found dumped in a remote area of Brooklyn on Feb. 25. Tracking technology has shown that Littlejohn's cellphone was in that area about 16 hours after he escorted St. Guillen, 24, from a SoHo bar, The Falls, where he was working, authorities have said. Blood from Littlejohn was found on plastic ties used to bind her hands, cops said. Littlejohn, who is being held on charges of murdering St. Guillen, also is suspected in two sex assaults and the attempted sex assault on Oct. 19 of a York College student in Queens. The 19-year-old woman escaped from her assailant's van while still wearing the handcuffs he had used to bind her. Although she was unable to identify Littlejohn as her attacker in a lineup, cops say they matched his DNA to genetic material found on the handcuffs. larry.celona@nypost.com http://www.nypost.com/news/regionalnews/62249.htm

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