New York Daily News

Clothes made the susp

Alleged deli killer wearing Hazmats forgot to change his duds

- BY REBECCA WHITE, MOLLY CRANE-NEWMAN AND THOMAS TRACY

Kimond Cyrus, the ex-con accused of killing a popular grocery store clerk and ripping off at least three other stores, was identified because he left the front of his hazmat suit open, exposing the similar clothing he wore during each crime, prosecutor­s said Friday.

Cyrus, 39, wore different hazmat suits during different robberies, but the clothing he wore underneath was the same — camouflage pants and a dark-colored sweatshirt with white writing, Manhattan Assistant District Attorney Gregory SanGermano said at the suspected murderer’s arraignmen­t at Manhattan Criminal Court.

Surveillan­ce footage of Cyrus without the hazmat suit, but wearing the clothes he had on during the killing, helped detectives identify him, SanGermano said.

“Because he was tracked before and after the incident, the clothing the defendant was wearing before and after the murder is important,” SanGermano said.

Cyrus was ordered held without bail on murder and weapons possession charges Friday. Wearing a brown jacket, a blue sweatshirt and jeans and a blue surgical mask, the ex-con remained quiet during the brief arraignmen­t proceeding, only answering with a “Yeah,” when he was asked if he understood what was happening.

A search warrant was executed on his Bronx apartment Friday, prosecutor­s said.

He was caught near his Bronx home about 10:40 a.m. Thursday after members of the NYPD’s Homicide and Shootings Enhancemen­t Team tracked surveillan­ce video from one of his crimes right to his front door.

The ex-con is accused of robbing two stores in Brooklyn before heading into the Daona Gourmet Deli on the Upper East Side on March 3 and shooting worker Sueng Choi, 67, while pistol-whipping him during a botched robbery, cops said.

The bullet went through Choi’s left hand was and through the top of his forehead, according to court documents.

After killing Choi, Cyrus jumped on a moped and sped off into the Bronx, where, about 22 minutes later, he robbed the Ya Ya Deli on Melrose Ave. and E. 160th St., cops said.

Police later found one of his hazmat suits behind a building that was a five-minute walk from the Ya Ya Deli, police said.

The first break in the case came Sunday when a tipster called the NYPD’s Crime Stoppers hotline and reported seeing the suspect, wearing military fatigues and riding a blue moped, entering the Camilla Grocery near Crotona Park in the Bronx.

A worker at Camilla Grocery told the Daily News that a customer spotted Cyrus hanging out outside the store on the same day of the killing, although he never robbed the place.

Cops took the store’s surveillan­ce footage on Monday, the worker, who would only identify himself as Alberto, said.

Detectives searched the area and found more video of Cyrus in the same clothes he wore under the hazmat suit on the night of the murder, as well as footage of him putting on the protective outfit, according to court documents.

“This was good old-fashioned police work,” Mayor Adams said.

Customers worried about Choi working overnight shifts alone.

“He knows it’s a dangerous place to work,” Choi’s ex-wife Jenny Chon, 66 said. “I don’t talk to him much, but every time I talk to him on the phone, maybe once a year, he tells me it’s dangerous.”

Cyrus pleaded guilty to felony assault in 2003 for a violent Midtown Manhattan attack. He beat a man and sprayed him in the eyes with a burning liquid before hitting him over the head with a glass bottle in 2002, records show. As his victim lay on the sidewalk, Cyrus swiped his wallet.

He also has a 2009 arrest for operating a motor vehicle while impaired and a 2020 arrest for jumping bail in Mount Vernon, Westcheste­r County.

Cyrus’ attorney, Adam Freeman, said Friday that he plans on putting up a “vigorous defense.”

Choi’s murder prompted a plea from the NYPD and Adams for store owners to ask customers to unmask themselves upon entering a shop — at least long enough for their faces to be seen.

“Face masks protected us from COVID but it is really allowing criminals to exploit this,” the mayor said while holding a black surgical mask. “We can have public safety and health. They go together.”

 ?? ?? Kimond Cyrus (main and inset with gun), accused of three deli stickups, including one on Upper East Side where clerk was killed, wore different hazmat suit as disguise for each alleged crime but the same clothes underneath, which led cops viewing security videos to find him.
Kimond Cyrus (main and inset with gun), accused of three deli stickups, including one on Upper East Side where clerk was killed, wore different hazmat suit as disguise for each alleged crime but the same clothes underneath, which led cops viewing security videos to find him.
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