NYC-based Guyanese charged for throwing brother from building
Months before he allegedly threw his four-year-old brother to his death off a Brooklyn roof, Shawn Smith had been showing signs of trouble.
Smith, 20, was planning to immigrate to New York with his family last December, but mental health issues had forced him to stay at a hospital in Guyana before he was able to join the rest of his family, relatives said on Sunday.
According to the NY Daily News, months after arriving in New York, Smith broke down a heavy door in his family’s Flatlands apartment, prompting his frightened mother to call 911. He landed in Kings County Hospital for more psychiatric treatment.
“He spent three weeks there, and when he come back he was okay,” mother Odessa Frith, 39, said Sunday. “Everything was okay,” she was quoted as saying by the NY Daily News.
But other relatives could tell something remained seriously wrong with Smith.
“You could see in his eyes he was deteriorating,” said Robin Frith, who is married to Smith’s grandfather. “He was a sick person, you could see it!”
On Saturday, Smith finally snapped.
He flagged down cops near his family’s home around 3:30 a.m., and led them to little Shimron Smith’s broken body in the courtyard of their seven-storey building on Nostrand Ave. near Avenue K.
Authorities say he calmly told the cops he had tossed his brother from the roof about 45 minutes earlier. He confessed to the shocking crime a second time while in Police custody, according to Police sources.
“I’ve finally become a criminal!” Smith told reporters as he was walked out of the 70th Precinct stationhouse on Saturday night in a Tyvek suit.
Little Shimron had just started pre-K at Public School 119 Amersfort a few weeks ago. A heartbreaking photo shared with the Daily News shows him on his first day proudly holding a pint-sized gray-and-green backpack.
“It’s a shock. I didn’t brush my teeth for two days,” his grief-stricken grandfather Keith Frith told the Daily News Sunday. “I didn’t shower for two days. I just get up, And I’m numb.”
The boy, playful and cheery as always, had last visited their home a few weeks ago. Robin Frith was cooking chowmein that day.
“He came to me and he says to me, ‘I’m hungry, Auntie’,” Robin Frith recalled. “He ended up leaving before dinner was completed,” she said. “That will stay in my head all the time, because that’s the last thing we had spoken about, that he wanted to eat the food.”
The tot was inseparable from his 5-year-old brother Steven — and often acted like the older sibling.
“Shimron acted like the grown up. Shimron would engage Steven and he would tell him what to do,” Robin Frith chuckled. “He was a special character . . . Shimron was a smart kid.” Now Steven is trying to comprehend he’ll never see his little brother again.
“He know what happened, but he still doesn’t understand,” mother Odessa Frith said. “He want to know when Shimron comes back, why he’s taking so long.”
“My baby was just a joy,” Odessa said of little Shimron. “He touched everyone’s hearts.”
Relatives said Smith often refused to take the medication he was prescribed when he was discharged from the hospital after breaking the door, because he believed it was poison.
“If you’re schizophrenic, you’re hearing voices and (they’re) telling you what to do,” Robin Frith said. “There were people (from the hospital) who were visiting the house and he wasn’t speaking to them.” Despite his struggles, he worked a part-time job with his cousin doing demolition work.
His mother was baffled about what could drive him to commit such unspeakable horror.
“I don’t know. I ask myself,” she said. “Even the night before it happened, all of us, we sit here on the chair over here, we’re sitting and laughing and laughing.”
Smith was charged with murder after his arrest. His arraignment was postponed on Sunday while he was evaluated at Bellevue Hospital. (NY Daily News)