Staten Island grand jury declines attempted murder charge against 14-year-old boy

A Staten Island stabbing sparked by a can of fart spray became fodder for politicians looking to decry the parenting of the teens involved and rail against criminal justice reform โ€” but a grand jury refused to indict one of the youngsters after learning the adult victim may have escalated the messy melee.

The victim, a 51-year-old man, was hurt in the April 21 incident at the Great Kills stop on the Staten Island Railroad. At a news conference three days later, Vito Fossella, Staten Islandโ€™s Republican borough president, decried the violence and what he referred to as โ€œthis turnstile type of justice.โ€

Another press conference attendee, Rep. Nicole Malliotakis (R-S.I.), blasted the stateโ€™s bail reform laws and the โ€œRaise the Ageโ€ law, which increased New Yorkโ€™s age of criminal responsibility from 16 to 18 years old.

On Monday, a Staten Island grand jury saw it differently โ€” and declined to bring adult charges against a 14-year-old boy initially accused of attempted murder after the youngster argued self-defense and the 51-year-old admitted taunting the teens.

A 13-year-old girl accused of attempted murder in the actual stabbing remained in custody after a juvenile court hearing Friday, said a spokesman for the city Law Department, which prosecutes children in Family Court.

A 24-second video posted on SILive.com shows the end of the fight, with the 51-year-old on the ground, besieged by the teens, but not what happened beforehand.

It started when the accused 14-year-old and his friends, including two young boys and the 13-year-old girl, boarded the Staten Island Railway at Stapleton for a Friday afternoon train and bus journey to the Staten Island Mall.

โ€œTheyโ€™re kids, so I guess one of them had, like, some fart spray or whatever,โ€ the 14-year-old boyโ€™s father told the Daily News. โ€œAnd they sprayed it on the train. And then from that, I guess, the gentleman was offended or had an issue with it.โ€

Because grand jury proceedings are secret,…

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