World News

Police Identify Woman Who Was Burnt To Death In Subway

Micheal Chukwuebuka, Reporting

The woman who was burnt to death in a New York City subway earlier this month has been identified as 57-year-old Debrina Kawam from Toms River, New Jersey.

Stonix News recalls that Kawam was asleep on an idle F train at the Stillwell Avenue station, in Brooklyn, on Dec. 22, when just before 7:30 a.m. a man set her on fire and fled.

At that time, police did not share any additional information about the victim. The initial release from the NYPD said she was 61, but the age was corrected in a later release. New York City Mayor Eric Adams said Kawam had “a brief stint” in the city’s homeless shelter system.

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“Our hearts go out to the family,” Adams said during a news conference Tuesday. “A horrific incident to have to live through and just watching that tape, just really, I couldn’t even watch it all the way through. It was just a bad incident and it impacts on how New Yorkers feel.”

Brooklyn District Attorney Eric Gonzalez told reporters last week that his heart goes out to the victim and her family.

“Just because someone appears to have been living in the situation of homelessness does not mean that there’s not going to be family devastated by the tragic way she lost her life,” Gonzalez said.

A vigil was held for Kawam last Thursday at the Stillwell Avenue station.

Sebastian Zapeta-Calil, 33, a Guatemalan citizen, was arrested in connection with Kawam’s murder the same day, after he was caught on police body camera footage. Subway riders called 911 when they spotted him hours later and officers took him into custody.

Police Identify Woman Who Was Burnt To Death In Subway

Sebastian Zapeta-Calil, 33.

He was indicted on four counts of murder and one count of arson last Friday, per prosecutors.

A grand jury indictment was announced in court on one count of first-degree murder, three counts of second-degree murder and one count of first-degree arson, according to the Brooklyn District Attorney’s office.

The first-degree murder charge carries the possibility of life without parole.

Zapeta-Calil appeared in Brooklyn court Tuesday, December 31 and was remanded back into custody.

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Micheal Chukwuebuka
Micheal Chukwuebuka is a passionate writer. He is a reporter with STONIX NEWS. Besides writing, he is also a cinematographer.

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