New York Daily News LOVER'S QUARREL ENDS WITH MYSTERY DEATH
TEEN GIRL IS SHOVED & COLLAPSES AT TRAIN STATION
By Leslie Casimir and Jonathan Lemire
Heartbroken relative were struggling yesterday to learn
why and 18-year-old college student collapsed on a subway
platform and died after a fight with her boyfriend.
Zakiya Kennedy's family said yesterday that the boyfriend
had pushed the young woman on the uptown D train platform
at the 42nd Street Friday evening. Kennedy collapsed minutes
later and was dead within the hour, cops said.
One distraught relative told the boyfriend over the phone
yesterday "you left her to die," according to Erica Williams,
41, Kennedy's aunt.
But Williams, who was receiving a steady stream of grieving
friends at her niece's apartment in the Frederick Douglass
Houses on the upper west side, didn't blame the suitor.
"He loved her. It's a tragedy," the aunt said. "He did
not mean to hurt her. He is going to have to live with
this for the rest of his life."
An autopsy on Kennedy performed yesterday by the city
medical examiner was inconclusive, officials said. No
arrests have been made.
Kennedy, a freshman at Berkeley College in midtown, was
on the subway platform at 8 p.m. with her boyfriend of
a year, whom family members identified only by his first
name, Jermaine.
"They were having a stupid fight over something that's
not important," said Williams, who was comforting Kennedy's
mother, Bridget, over the loss of her only child. "He
walked away from her, and she came up behind him.
"He then pushed her away," she said. "She fell and he
left."
Kennedy go to her feet and then told a cop in the station
that she had fallen and was suffering head and leg pain,
although there was no visible sign of injury, police said.
"She told the cop that she fell," Williams said, "and
then she keeled over."
Kennedy was taken to Bellevue Hospital, where she was
pronounced dead at 9:15 p.m., police said.
Detectives were expected to interview Jermaine, who lives
in Jamaica, Queens, by last night, but a police spokesman
said no one was in custody.
Kennedy and Jermaine were high school sweethearts who
had been dating for almost a year after going to the senior
prom together at Louis Brandeis High School on the upper
west side her family said.
Kennedy, a fashion major who was born in Oakland, California,
but moved to Manhattan as a infant, was planning to try
out for the reality show "America's Next Top Model" at
the end of the month, and that was all she could talk
about, her family said.
"She was working out and getting ready," Williams said.
"She was a beautiful girl, one of those kids you didn't
have to worry about."