New York Post

He won't face hos 'crime'

Cop ‘killer’ller skips graphic trial start

- By REBECCA ROSENBERG

Prosecutor­s described in chilling opening statements the moment a career criminal allegedly shot and killed an NYPD cop during a 2015 foot chase in East Harlem — but the defendant wasn’t around to hear it.

Tyrone Howard, 33, refused to attend the first day of his murder trial in Manhattan — part of his “efforts to do whatever he can to derail the proceeding­s,” said Justice Michael Obus.

While he was parked in a cell, Assistant District Attorney Linda Ford told jurors that Officer Randolph Holder, 33, and his partner came face-toface with Howard on an East 120th Street footbridge following a drug-related shootout in October 2015.

“He knows they’re looking for him and he knows why,” she said of Howard, 33.

“He took out the gun, the .40-caliber semiautoma­tic pistol, he aimed at the officers and pulled the trigger. He fired one shot and he struck Officer Holder in the front of his head.”

The bullet went through Holder’s brain and exited the back of his skull, and he fell to the ground.

“It was not a survivable injury,” Ford said as a dozens of cops watched from the gallery in Manhattan Supreme Court.

Twenty minutes earlier, Howard had been involved in a gunfight on East 102nd Street and fled north, snatching a man’s bicycle along the way, Ford said.

After the deadly confrontat­ion on the footbridge, Howard ran north as Holder’s partner, Officer Omar Wallace, shot him in the buttocks and leg.

Wallace did not pursue him and turned to his partner who “lay bleeding on the ground,” the prosecutor said.

Howard allegedly dumped his gun in the East River as dozens of cops descended on the area in a massive manhunt.

The limping criminal was trying to cross Harlem River Drive near 124th Street when Officer Kristen Swinkunas spotted him on the busy thoroughfa­re.

She slammed on her brakes, jumped from her car and chased him down.

Defense lawyer Michael Hurwitz suggested to jurors that Howard may not have been the man who shot Holder. It was dark and everything had happened quickly, Hurwitz argued.

The man whose bike was stolen was smoking a joint and may have been mistaken when he identified Howard as the thief, he added.

“They must prove identity beyond a reasonable doubt,” Hurwitz said.

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 ??  ?? ONE HERO, ONE COWARD: Tyrone Howard (right) wasn’t in Manhattan court Monday for his trial in the murder of Officer Randolph Holder (above).
ONE HERO, ONE COWARD: Tyrone Howard (right) wasn’t in Manhattan court Monday for his trial in the murder of Officer Randolph Holder (above).
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