The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Judge’s death considered suspicious in about-face

New York police initially regarded case as suicide.

- Barbara Demick

NEW YORK — The mystery of how a prominent African-American judge came to be found floating dead in the Hudson River has deepened as her family and widowed husband disputed suggestion­s by the New York Police Department that she had committed suicide.

What is known is that Sheila Abdus-Salaam, 65, a judge on the state’s highest court, went for a walk alone on the evening of April 11, locking the door to her Harlem brownstone, leaving her phone and wallet at home.

She had called in sick that day and hadn’t gone to work. Surveillan­ce videos spaced over several hours showed the judge walking briskly alone toward the river wearing sweat pants and white sneakers as though she were perhaps exercising.

The last video of her walking was captured after midnight. The next afternoon, her body was found at the edge of the river in an area popular with joggers and bicycle riders.

In the initial days, police said the death appeared to be a suicide because there were no obvious signs of trauma to her body. Reports circulated that her family had a history of suicide — that her 92-yearold mother had taken her life in 2012 and her brother two years later. But her family disputes those stories, saying Abdus-Salaam’s mother died of old age and that her brother of terminal lung cancer.

Gregory Jacobs, an Episcopal priest who become Abdus-Salaam’s third husband when they married last year, also challenged the portrayal of his wife as suicidal.

“Reports have frequently included unsubstant­iated comments concerning my wife’s possible mental and emotional state of mind at the time of her death. Those of us who loved Sheila and knew her well do not believe that these unfounded conclusion­s have any basis in reality,” Jacobs said last week.

What looked like an openand-shut case has been assigned a special team of investigat­ors. Police are now treating Abdus-Salaam’s death as suspicious and have put out a poster asking for informatio­n, accompanie­d by a picture of the judge.

After a long career as a public defender and lower-court judge, Abdus-Salaam became in 2013 the first African-American woman on the Court of Appeals, as New York’s highest court is known. Last summer, she wrote what was considered a landmark decision in the state, awarding visitation rights to a nonbiologi­cal parent in a gay couple.

Since the 1980s, Abdus-Salaam had lived in Harlem. She married a man from the neighborho­od who had converted to Islam, continuing to use his name profession­ally after their divorce.

The brownstone she bought in the 1980s, when New York’s economy was in the doldrums and the streets were racked with crime, is now worth about $3 million.

“It is very weird,” said John Audate, 60, a neighbor whose wife helped Abdus-Salaam buy the brownstone in the 1980s. “She had a good job and a nice house. It’s devastatin­g to us and very hard to believe she killed herself.”

Abdus-Salaam had remarried the year before. Although Jacobs, her husband, continued to live at the diocese in Newark, N.J., he often spent weekends at the brownstone, and neighbors would see them strolling. The weekend before her death, Abdus-Salaam had spent the weekend with him in Newark.

Although Abdus-Salaam didn’t often open up about her private life, one thing people knew about her was that she loved to swim.

“She was like a fish in water,” Audate said. “She told my wife how much she loved the beach and pools when she was a girl.”

“This whole story seems so unlikely. I don’t think it is so easy to kill yourself by drowning,” said Todd Millner, 47, a film editor who lives a few doors away.

Abdus-Salaam’s death has attracted much speculatio­n on social media and in the New York tabloids.

“She was a black woman in an age of anti-blackness and white supremacy. She was a woman in an age where violence against women is too often dismissed,” wrote political commentato­r Shaun King in a column in the New York Daily News. “Sheila Abdus-Salaam may have very well chosen to check out of this world. That was her decision to make, but the troubling reality is that we live in a time where many ugly forces of evil could’ve also seen her as a threat and killed her.”

 ?? MIKE GROLL / AP 2013 ?? Justice Sheila AbdusSalaa­m’s body was found on the shore of the Hudson River off Manhattan on April 12.
MIKE GROLL / AP 2013 Justice Sheila AbdusSalaa­m’s body was found on the shore of the Hudson River off Manhattan on April 12.

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