New York Daily News

Bodega worker out of town for Trump’s visit

- BY ELLEN MOYNIHAN

The Harlem bodega worker whom Donald Trump was planning to visit Tuesday missed the meeting because he was on a trip to the Dominican Republic, according to the man’s lawyer.

“Jose wanted to come but couldn’t get a flight on time,” Jose Alba’s attorney Richard Cardinale said Wednesday.

Alba, who in 2022 was arrested and then cleared in a fatal stabbing that was later deemed to be self-defense, is not a supporter of the former president, said the lawyer.

“He’s not a political person. He’s nonpartisa­n, he’s just someone who believes in law and order,” said Cardinale.

Francisco Marte, founder of the Bodega and Small Business Associatio­n, said he was in touch with Alba, 64, last week about Trump’s visit but couldn’t reach him Tuesday because Alba is sometimes deep in the countrysid­e with poor phone service.

“I told [Alba] it would be good because it’s what we are doing, fighting and asking for public safety,” Marte said about Trump’s appearance at the Sanaa Convenient Store on Broadway near W. 139th St.

The bodega, which used to be called Blue Moon Convenient Store, was the site of the deadly caught-onvideo altercatio­n on July 1, 2022, in which Austin Simon, 35, confronted Alba over what he said was a lack of respect for his girlfriend’s child.

The girlfriend said Alba snatched a bag of potato chips from her 10-year-old daughter’s hand after the mom was unable to pay, according to a criminal complaint.

Simon came behind the counter and pushed Alba, grabbing his neck, before the older man plunged a knife into Austin at least five times, piercing his heart, jugular vein and a lung. During the fracas, Alba was stabbed in the arm by Austin’s girlfriend.

The worker was charged with second-degree murder and spent time at Rikers Island before Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg dropped the case.

“He’s afraid to work in any bodegas in the neighborho­od,” said Cardinale, who added that his client still lives in New York but goes to his native Dominican Republic regularly to visit family.

“Mentally, he’s trying to escape,” said Marte. “He’s doing better, but sometimes he’s having flashbacks or when he sees the scars that he has on his arm, it brings back memories.”

The former president’s Tuesday visit, which came after the second day of jury selection for his hush money trial, was greeted by both supporters and opponents, some shouting, “Dump Trump.”

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