Date: 9/12/12 5:36 pm
From: Ellen Paul <ellen.paul...>
Subject: [MDBirding] Bad news from NYC


http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/09/12/woman-73-sexually-assaulted-in-central-park/?hp
A 73-year-old woman was raped in Central Park just before noon on Wednesday, the police said.

The woman told police that she was approached by a man in a wooded area of the park near 74th Street on the west side, said Police Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly and Paul J. Browne, the head police spokesman. They gave the following account:


N.Y.P.D.
Surveillance-camera still of the Central Park rape suspect.
The woman, a bird-watcher who goes to the park every day, had encountered the man before. About a week and a half ago, she had seen him masturbating in the Ramble area and taken a photo of him. At the time, the man demanded that the woman delete the photo, and when she refused, he tried unsuccessfully to take her camera.

Then Wednesday, around 11:50 a.m., the woman was birding near Strawberry Fields when the man, whom she described as white and clean shaven, with a Russian accent and in his 40s or 50s, appeared again.

He said to her, �Do you remember me?�

Then he threw her to the ground, raped her and stole her bag, which contained a camera. It was not clear if the camera was the one that she had used earlier or if she kept the photos from the earlier encounter, which she never reported to the police. The man also beat her with his fists.


N.Y.P.D.
Another photo of the Central Park rape suspect.
The woman was taken to a hospital.

�She was a victim of a terrible attack,� Mr. Browne said.

Eric Ozawa, a writing instructor at New York University, said that he was bird-watching in the park when he saw a woman�s legs sticking out on a mulch path. He said he initially thought the woman was sleeping. Then he saw her sit up.

The woman had mulch sticking to parts of her face, which was badly bruised, Mr. Ozawa said. Her forehead was swollen; her right eye was turning blue. She waved him over and told him that she had been raped.

Mr. Ozawa said he called 911.

�For something like this to happen in broad daylight is particularly horrifying and someone of her age,� Mr. Ozawa said. �It took me a while, I think, to really register what had happened. It was such a shock. The park has seemed so safe for so long.�

Anyone with information about the suspect is asked to contact Crime Stoppers � by phone (800-577-8477) or text (text to 274637 and enter TIP577 before the information), or by visiting the Web site.

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