New York Daily News

‘Incompeten­t’ to stand trial in Queens slay

- BY NANCY DILLON

Accused killer Danueal Drayton has been declared incompeten­t again in California as new paperwork claims he took sick souvenir photos of his Los Angeles victim during her two-day hostage ordeal, the Daily News has learned.

The Brooklyn man, who allegedly murdered nurse Samantha Stewart (below right) in her Springfiel­d Gardens, Queens, home last July, then used her credit card to flee to Los Angeles, where he attacked another woman, was declared incompeten­t last Friday, his defense lawyer told a judge Wednesday.

“Defendant must regain competency,” Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Susan Speer said as she formally paused his criminal case pending further psychiatri­c treatment and evaluation.

The new suspension came as the Daily News uncovered a search warrant affidavit revealing chilling new details of the California police investigat­ion.

The new paperwork confirms Drayton, 28, quickly confessed to killing Stewart after he was tracked to his next victim’s apartment in L.A.’s North Hollywood neighborho­od by a fugitive task force, including NYPD detectives, on July 24.

It also says Drayton (above left) admitted roughing up the L.A. woman — who was found still alive inside the apartment — and recorded images of her during the attack.

“Drayton made statements of taking photos of [the Los Angeles victim] during the incident,” the affidavit written by the LAPD’s John Perez said. “Drayton admitted choking our victim with his arms and hands in attempts to kill her. Drayton stated he took a picture of our victim during the incident and that she was pretending to be dead,” Perez wrote in another section of the filing.

The suspect is charged with attempted murder of the Los Angeles woman, as well as rape, false imprisonme­nt by violence and sexual penetratio­n by a foreign object.

Authoritie­s say he met and exchanged numbers with the unidentifi­ed woman, who was 28 at the time, shortly after arriving in Los Angeles.

A judge allowed investigat­ors to search Drayton’s phone and recover images, videos, location data, web history and text and chat data from the period of June 1 to July 25.

“In my experience, if the suspect used his phone to take a picture during a crime, then he may have photos from other crimes,” Perez said in his affidavit asking for the search.

The detective said he was interested in finding other possible victims.

“Drayton stated he met many people during his stay in California,” Perez wrote.

At his arraignmen­t July 30, Drayton moaned loudly while strapped to a chair as a public defender entered a not guilty plea on his behalf. The case was placed on hold in August for a prior competency hearing that led to an initial finding of incompeten­ce. It was reinstated in early November.

In addition to Stewart’s murder, Drayton also allegedly choked an ex-girlfriend in Nassau County and raped an unidentifi­ed Brooklyn woman, sources previously told The News

Stewart, 29, was found strangled and battered inside her Queens home July 17.

During a jailhouse interview with The News on July 31, Drayton recalled killing Stewart after meeting her through a dating app.

He said he didn’t want to strangle her but was compelled by “voices.”

“I really liked her. I didn’t want to kill her,” he told The News while seated behind a glass partition at the Twin Towers men’s jail in Los Angeles.

“I’m a passenger in my own body,” he said multiple times, claiming the voices hijacked his self-control.

“It’s mind control,” he said. “They use direct energy weapons on me to control my mind.”

Drayton claimed he suffers from schizophre­nia and bipolar II disorder.

Drayton is expected to face murder and rape charges if he is extradited back to the East Coast to stand trial in the Queens case.

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