free
WEDNESDAY
feb. 22, 2017 high 57°, low 46°
t h e i n de p e n de n t s t u de n t n e w s pa p e r of s y r a c u s e , n e w yor k |
N • Camping out
Some SU students have been staying in tents outside of the Carrier Dome ahead of Wednesday’s men’s basketball game between SU and Duke. Page 3
O • In the name
Business columnist Daniel Strauss argues that Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s start-up program needs more than a name change to incentivize business growth. Page 5
P • Lightly salted
dailyorange.com
Syracuse’s history as the Salt City goes back to the 1800s. Today, that legacy has crossed state borders and can be found in towns across the U.S. of the same name. Page 9
IN THE PAINT SU VS. DUKE SEE INSERT
crime
Suspect gets 3rd court date By Delaney Van Wey asst. news editor
JULES NSHIMIYE, a student at Henninger High School, used to have to walk 1.6 miles daily from his home to school. He now takes the bus, but other students closer to the school still must walk. ally moreo photo editor
Getting closer State funding remains last hurdle for busing changes By Rachel Sandler digital editor
J
ules Nshimiye walked his usual path home from school one day last winter. Past Teall Avenue. Past the mounds of snow that inevitably form during a Syracuse winter. Past the entrance of Lincoln Park, about a mile from Henninger High School. Nshimiye had just finished soccer practice. It was dark and he was alone. The details of what happened next are fuzzy. Nshimiye remembers walking with his head down past a group of about six or seven men. They yelled at him. Nshimiye
You have first graders you can’t see walking between cars in the road because the sidewalks aren’t shoveled. We’ve had students attacked on their way to school. Joyce Suslovic social studies teacher at henninger high school
is a refugee from Congo and had only been in the United States for about a year. He didn’t fully understand what they were saying, so he responded, “No English.” What he remembers next is a fist with brass knuckles punching his head, right above his eye. A passerby called 911, and the men scattered. “I’m losing my memories of it,” said Nshimiye, who was a 15-yearold sophomore at Henninger High School when the incident happened. “It’s not something someone wants to remember.” Up until a year ago, he would wake up at 5:30 every morning and trek 1.6
see busing page 7
A misdemeanor case against one of the men charged with murdering a Syracuse University student moved forward after a pretrial hearing in Syracuse City Court on Tuesday. Cameron Isaac, 23, was charged in December with tampering with a witness in the fourth degree, a misdemeanor. He and his lawyer, Lance Cimino, appeared before Judge James Cecile on Tuesday for a pretrial hearing, during which they discussed the available evidence and how the case would proceed, Cecile said. Cimino did not return phone calls on Tuesday. Isaac was given a new court date, April 6, which Cecile said will be another pretrial hearing. At Isaac’s Jan. 19 court appearance, Cimino had said he would seek to have the tampering charges dismissed. Isaac received the tampering charge in early December after he allegedly asked a witness not to testify against him in the murder case. During the next month and a half, Isaac’s defense will undergo the discovery phase, during which they will turn over information about evidence and witnesses. Isaac, along with Ninimbe Mitchell, 20, was charged in the fall with the October murder of Xiaopeng “Pippen” Yuan, who was a Syracuse University student from China. Isaac and Mitchell were arrested in November and formally charged with murder in the second degree, robbery in the first degree and criminal possession of a weapon in the second degree. Last month, Isaac was indicted on first-degree murder, an upgrade from the original seconddegree charge. Isaac faces the murder, robber and criminal possession of a weapon charges in Onondaga County Court. In January, Cimino said it was possible that the tampering charge could also end up being included in county court. But whether it stays in city court or moves to county court, Cimino said he will seek to have the charge dismissed. Yuan, 23, of China, was found dead behind the Springfield Garden Apartments located on Caton Drive on Sept. 30. Authorities have said the two suspects arranged to meet him at the apartments for what was believed to be a drug transaction. Isaac and Mitchell are accused of robbing Yuan before shooting and killing him. dovanwey@syr.edu