New York Daily News

SINGS AFTER 20 YEARS

Witness in Jay slay tells court of fatal shots

- BY JOHN ANNESE

Jam Master Jay’s close friend described the Run-DMC founder’s final moments in his Queens music studio — and, after years of silence, pointed the finger Wednesday at the man he says pulled the trigger.

Uriel “Tony” Rincon testified in Brooklyn Federal Court that he sat inches away from the 37-yearold icon, born Jason Mizell, and watched as Karl Jordan Jr. greeted him with a “half-handshake” and, in a flash, shot him in the head.

“That’s when I heard a couple of shots,” Rincon told the jury at the murder trial of Jordan, nicknamed “Little D,” and alleged accomplice Ronald “Tinard” Washington. The duo are accused of killing Mizell because they were cut out of a drug deal.

“I see Jay just fall, ’cause his back was to me at that time. … As Jay was falling, I see Jordan shrug Jay off of him,” Rincon said.

Sitting on the witness stand, Rincon dabbed tears from his eyes as he described that bloody October 2002 night, and told prosecutor Mark Misorek he was too scared to come forward, even though he recognized both Jordan and Washington.

Rincon, work for Mizell, organizing events and picking up and dropping off artists visiting Mizell’s 24/7 Studio on Merrick Blvd. in Hollis.

On Oct. 30, 2002, he was doing just that, sitting on a green couch in the lounge, playing Madden football with Mizell, talking about promoting “Rusty Waters” — a new music group featuring Mizell’s childhood friend and business partner Randy Allen, and the DJ’s cousin, who went by the nickname Bo Scaggs.

Allen was in the studio’s control room, with a young woman who showed up to promote her music.

Mizell’s manager and Allen’s sister, Lydia High, was in the same lounge as Mizell and Rincon. An aspiring rapper, “Mike B,” was either in the control room or a separate room, Rincon recalled.

Mizell brought a gun with him, taking it out of his bag and placing it on the armrest of his couch, Rincon said.

But he never reached for it when Jordan came through, wearing a hoodie, according to Rincon.

“I kind of look to my left, and basically I see the door come right open, and then I see Mr. Jordan come through the door,” Rincon said.

Rincon said he knew who Jordan was, explaining, “I’d seen his face a few times.”

“Did you have any trouble seeing his face?” Misorek asked, and Rincon responded, “Nah. I saw his profile, a little bit of his tattoo on his neck.” Rincon got a call from his mother on his cell phone right as he heard Mizell, “Oh s—!” and heard two or three shots, he said. Washington was standing by the studio door, yelling at High to stay down, he said.

One of the bullets went through Rincon’s left leg, above the knee. “When Little D shrugged Jay off, he turned the other way, turned toward his left, and just out,” Rincon said. “It was maybe 10 to 15 seconds.”

Allen ran out of the control room and grabbed Mizell’s gun to follow the duo, toward the rear fire escape, Rincon said. Rincon added that he tried to tend to his wound and rouse Mizell, “shaking him, asking him, is he OK, can he talk. And he is not responding.”

When the police arrived, Rincon said he didn’t know who the gunman was. “I was scared. There was just a lot of things going on at one time. I was just surprised at who I saw and what happened,” he said.

He told Allen he recognized Jordan and Washington, but otherwise he kept that detail to himself for close to 15 years.

Jordan and Washington’slawyers tried to paint Rincon as a liar, pointing out that even though he said he wanted to help police solve the crime, he maintained for years he didn’t know the shooter — including in a 2007 interview with a Daily News reporter.

“Your friend, Jam Master Jay, is on the floor dying, right?” Jordan’s lawyer Mark DeMarco asked Rincon. “You refused to tell the police who killed your friend?”

“I was scared,” Rincon said. As for the funeral encounter, DeMarco asked about Jordan, “He wasn’t armed?” “He didn’t threaten you?” and “He only asked you what you saw?”

“Correct,” Rincon responded,

 ?? AP ?? Trial witness tells court how Karl Jordan (right) greeted Jam Master Jay (left) then shot him in Queens in 2002.
AP Trial witness tells court how Karl Jordan (right) greeted Jam Master Jay (left) then shot him in Queens in 2002.

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