Blue city repeat offender linked to college student murder charged with new violent crimes after soft sentence
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One of the teenagers from New York City, previously implicated in the 2019 stabbing of 18-year-old Tessa Majors, a freshman at Barnard College, has once again been incarcerated. This comes after he received a relatively lenient juvenile sentence, as reported by local media, on charges of attempted murder and assault.

Zyairr Davis, who was 13 at the time of the incident, was among the trio arrested for the attack. However, since he wasn’t the one who delivered the lethal stab, he received the lightest punishment—an 18-month stint in juvenile detention, contrasting sharply with the life sentences handed to his co-defendants.

Recently, Davis has been re-arrested on charges including attempted murder, linked to a gang-related shooting in Harlem, as detailed by the New York Post. Court documents reveal he now faces almost a dozen new charges in adult court, most of which are violent offenses.

Majors, a native of Charlottesville, Virginia, was in her initial semester at Barnard College, which is affiliated with the prestigious Columbia University, situated just across the street.

Zyairr Davis has short braids and a beard in his latest mugshot

Davis, now an adult, appeared in a recent booking photo following his arrest on 11 charges related to the Harlem shooting. When he was 13, he participated in the robbery at knifepoint that resulted in the death of Majors, who was tragically killed during her first semester in New York City.

According to court records, Davis, along with his two 14-year-old accomplices, Rashaun Weaver and Luchiano Lewis, ambushed Majors from behind in Morningside Park, just a block away from her campus, around 7 p.m. on December 11, 2019.

They swiped her phone, but she fought back, biting Weaver hard enough that he dropped a knife, which Davis picked up and handed back to him, according to prosecutors.

According to a victims’ impact statement her family read at Weaver’s sentencing, she fought her way free twice, but the boys continued to surround and attack her.

Flowers, Christmas trees and Barnard College items are placed at a makeshift memorial for Tessa Majors, the 18-year-old Virginia student killed in Manhattan in a violent knifepoint robbery

A makeshift memorial stands for 18-year-old Barnard College freshman Tessa Majors in Morningside Park on December 26, 2019, in New York City. Three young teenagers were convicted of killing her in a knifepoint robbery. (David Dee Delgado/Getty Images)

Ultimately, Lewis held her in a headlock as Weaver stabbed her to death, so hard that Davis told police he saw down feathers exploding out of her jacket, Fox News Digital reported previously. She suffered repeated stab wounds, including one through the heart.

Police recovered Weaver’s DNA under her nails. Her father said at trial that she fiercely tried to keep her phone because she was an aspiring musician with years worth of songs on the device.

The two 14-year-olds were charged as adults, but the case against Davis remained in juvenile court, which slapped him with an 18-month sentence for robbery.

Tessa Majors smiling in this undated photograph, with blonde hair and large hoop earrings, wearing a black shirt

Tessa Majors smiling in this undated photograph provided by her family. The Virginia native was 18 years old attending Barnard College in New York City when she was stabbed and killed during a knifepoint robbery in Manhattan’s Morningside Park. (Courtesy of the Majors family)

Weaver pleaded guilty to second-degree murder in December 2021 in exchange for a sentence of 14 years to life in prison. He also pleaded guilty to two more unrelated robberies. Lewis pleaded guilty to second-degree murder and first-degree robbery and received a sentence of nine years to life in prison.

By April of this year, according to the Post report, he was back on the streets and allegedly involved in a gang-related Harlem shooting into a crowd.

While jailed on an attempted murder charge in a juvenile facility, he allegedly brawled with other inmates, according to court documents, and was accused of attacking a youth counselor, racking up new charges of assault and harassment.

“They always go back to ‘He was a poor kid who had a bad childhood,’” Kevin O’Connor, a former New York City youth services official, told the Post. “That’s not the victim’s problem. That’s where government is supposed to step in and do its job.”

He blamed New York’s “Raise the Age” law, which put more cases against teens under 18 in family court rather than criminal court, for allowing Davis back on the streets.

Davis, who was born in 2006, is finally charged as an adult, court records show.

He pleaded not guilty to 11 charges in connection with the Harlem shooting.

He is expected to make his first appearance in the jail brawl case on Nov. 12 and is due back in court in connection with the shooting on Dec. 4.

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