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  • 8
    Feb
    2013
    12:25pm, EST

    Taxi driver 'heard a voice tell him to go kill' before nanny was shot, affidavit says

    WPTV

    Rupert O'Neil Harty, 31, is led out of the West Palm Beach Police Department in handcuffs, charged with murder and attempted murder.

    By Brian Hamacher, NBCMiami.com

    A Florida taxi driver who says he "heard a voice tell him to go kill someone" before he shot and killed a nanny who was riding her bicycle in West Palm Beach was arrested late Thursday, police said.

    Rupert O'Neil Harty, 31, was charged with one count of first-degree murder in the Dec. 22 shooting of Amaria Grant following his arrest Thursday in connection with the Feb. 1 shooting of a male bicyclist, according to WPTV.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Records showed Harty was booked into jail early Friday and was being held without bond. It was unknown whether he has an attorney.

    Read more from NBCMiami.com

    West Palm Beach Police say Grant was riding her bicycle on South Olive Avenue near Edmor Road when Hardy approached her and shot her multiple times.

    According to an arrest affidavit, Harty told police he was sitting at his home when he "heard a voice tell him to go kill someone."

    After driving around in his taxi for 20 minutes, he parked and walked up to Grant, who was riding her bicycle on South Olive Avenue near Edmor Road.

    Harty shot her multiple times and fled the scene, police said.

    Police say Harty was charged with attempted murder in the Feb. 1 shooting that happened at the intersection of Broadway and 48th Street.

    The cyclist who was shot in that incident was rushed to St. Mary's Medical Center with serious gunshot wounds but is still alive, police said.

    When officers arrested Harty for the Feb. 1 shooting, he confessed to the shooting of Grant, police said.

    Harty is expected to make his first appearance in court Friday, WPTV reported.

    31 comments

    Those voices need to shut up and leave people alone. Geesh. Wait, I have a voice telling me to eat a girl scout cookie.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: shooting, nanny, taxi-driver, nbcmiami
  • 3
    Nov
    2012
    10:03pm, EDT

    Nanny charged in stabbing deaths of two children on New York's Upper West Side

    Carlo Allegri / REUTERS

    A girl looks at a makeshift memorial left outside the Krim family apartment in New York on Oct. 28.

    By Jonathan Dienst, NBCNewYork.com

    NEW YORK -- Police say they've charged an Upper West Side nanny with murder in the stabbing deaths of two young children under her care last month.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Yoselyn Ortega, 50, was arrested and charged with two counts each of murder in the first and second degrees in the stabbing deaths of two children in her care, Lucia Krim, age 6, and her 1-year-old brother, Leo, on Oct. 25.

    Also at NBCNewYork.com: Murder down, burglaries up in NYC after Sandy

    Leo's second birthday would have been Oct. 30.


    Ortega was recuperating from knife wounds to her neck at New York-Presbyterian Hospital, where she had been under police guard since the stabbing deaths.

    She agreed to speak with NYPD detectives Saturday afternoon from her bedside, and was formally arrested and charged after 6 p.m.

    A third sibling was with their mother when the killings happened. The mother returned home to discover her children dead and Ortega bleeding.

    Ortega remains hospitalized under police guard. She worked for the Krim family for two years. 

    Jonathan Dienst is WNBC's chief investigative correspondent. This article includes reporting from The Associated Press.

    The New York nanny who police say fatally stabbed two children in her care was reportedly enduring financial problems and seeking professional help. NBC's Mara Schiavocampo reports.

     

    161 comments

    Shouldn't this read "formally arrested" instead of "formerly arrested"?

    Show more
    Explore related topics: crime, new-york-city, featured, nanny, nbcnewyork
  • 27
    Oct
    2012
    7:12pm, EDT

    Community shaken after Manhattan nanny accused of killing children

     

    The New York nanny who police say fatally stabbed two children in her care was reportedly enduring financial problems and seeking professional help. NBC's Mara Schiavocampo reports.

    By David B. Caruso and Meghan Barr, NBCNewYork.com

    The nightmarish case of a nanny accused of stabbing to death two children in her care stunned the family's well-to-do neighborhood and caused legions of parents to wonder how well they know who is watching their kids.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The nanny lay in critical condition Friday with what police said were self-inflicted knife wounds, and investigators were unable to question her, in part because she was still breathing with the help of a tube.

    Her motive and mental state remained a mystery, authorities said, and no charges were filed.


    On Thursday evening, the children's mother, Marina Krim, took her 3-year-old daughter home from a swim lesson to find her other youngsters, ages 2 and 6, dying of knife wounds in the bathtub of their Upper West Side apartment near Central Park. The nanny then turned the blade on herself, police said.

    View NBCNewYork.com for complete coverage

    Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly said the investigation has yet to reveal anything amiss in the household before the slayings.

    There are tens of thousands of nannies working in New York City, but reports of serious violence by caregivers against children are exceedingly rare. Parents are accused of killing their own children with far more frequency.

    'A horrible tragedy'
    More common are stories about nannies like Brunilda Tirado, who threw her body over a stroller to protect a baby from falling debris during a building collapse in the same Manhattan neighborhood in 2005. She suffered a broken arm and other injuries.

    The slayings will undoubtedly prompt many parents hiring a nanny to check references more thoroughly and swallow hard over the possibility that they might unknowingly hire a person who would do their child harm.

    Andrew Burton / REUTERS

    A woman looks at a memorial left outside the Krim family apartment in New York on Oct. 27, 2012.

    "For working parents this is a nightmare. Every mother I know is asking today, 'How do I go back to work?'" said Denise Albert, who has two young children and lives a few blocks from the site of the tragedy.

    She stopped by the building to pay her respects, recalling a painful time she had to fire a nanny after 3 1/2 years when she found out the woman was lying about where she was taking the kids.

    "It's the most difficult relationship in the world," she said.

    Albert said the two college students now caring for her children after school feel like members of the family.

    Some parents said their trust in their nannies is unshaken.

    Watch the most-viewed videos on NBCNews.com 

    "It's a horrible tragedy, but it doesn't make me question my nanny at all," said Elizabeth McCarthy, a single mother of a 6-year-old boy. "For me, I found somebody I trust. She's an incredible part of my son's life. She's a wonderful person, she's raised children of her own and this doesn't make me in the least bit question anything about her."

    Across the street from the building where the Krims live, several nannies with children in strollers stood as if stricken, watching police officers milling around the entrance.

    Michelle Person, a nanny from Jamaica, broke down thinking about the children who were killed.

    "You just feel like it was the kid that you were taking care of, too. It's horrible," she said, her eyes filling with tears.

    She said she loves the 11-month-old boy she cares for as if he were her own son.

    Another nanny, Karen Henry, said she felt uncomfortable walking around the neighborhood after the deaths.

    "Parents are looking at you as though you're responsible for what happened," she said.

    Stay informed with the latest headlines; sign up for our newsletter

    Thin line
    Multitudes of parents think of their nannies as Mary Poppins-like heroes and trust them completely, but the relationship can be a complicated one. There is maybe no other profession in which the line between family and workplace, employer and employee, is so thin.

    Two years ago, New Yorkpassed a law to protect nannies from financial exploitation. The nannies commonly work 10- to 12-hour days, for an hourly wage similar to that of a full-time employee at Walmart, usually without benefits.

    Sharon Weatley, a writer and actress who is a former nanny and now relies on baby sitters to take care of her daughters, ages 4 and 14, said that if the Upper West Side nanny did indeed kill the children, "she is obviously crazy and this is a chemical imbalance going on in a horrifically tragic situation."

    Thursday's slayings evoked the case of Louise Woodward, a British teenager who was convicted of killing a baby in her care in Newton, Mass., in 1997. That case prompted discussion at the time about whether teenage au pairs could handle the stress of caring for a stranger's child. Woodward served less than a year in jail.

    This nanny's case is different. She is older and had experience. Police said she went to the Krims on a referral from another family.

    Cheryl Meyer, a psychology professor at Wright State University in Dayton, Ohio, and co-author of the book "Mothers Who Kill Their Children," said that while many women who kill their kids feel trapped, in most cases a nanny who thinks she is at breaking point with a difficult child can walk out.

    She said it's not uncommon to hear of a family in which the nanny or baby sitter quits, leaving a note or just never coming back.

    "Moms can't do that. There's no way out for them," Meyer said. "For a nanny, there is an out."

     

    39 comments

    RIP sweet children. My heart goes out to this family and friends. I cannot even to begin to think of the pain these parents are going through.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: murder, upper-west-side, nanny, nbcnewyork-featured

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