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Bronx officials want homeless shelter closed after murder

By Patrick Rocchio

BY PATRICK ROCCHIO

After the brutal murder of young Whitestone mother outside a Bronx homeless shelter, a host of elected officials and community members in Wakefield came together Thursday to call for the shelter’s closure.

The death of shelter director Anna Charle, 36, who was gunned down near Project Renewal’s Bronx Boulevard residence for men, allegedly by a former client has sparked outrage in the community over the shelter’s management and security.

Many in Wakefield, Woodlawn and Yonkers are now calling for the shuttering of Project Renewal’s Bronx Boulevard residence for men at 4380 Bronx Blvd. Elected officials were united in their desire to see it closed at a press conference outside the shelter Thursday.

Charle was found with a gunshot wound to the head on the sidewalk not far from the shelter after leaving work about 5:45 p.m. Monday. Police arrested West Spruill, who was charged with murder and criminal possession of a weapon, according to the criminal complaint filed by Bronx District Attorney Robert Johnson.

Assemblyman Jeff Dinowitz (D-Bronx) said that the officials deliberately withheld information before the shelter opened that many of the men to be housed there had been convicted of violent felonies.

“The tragic shooting that occurred near the Project Renewal homeless shelter on Monday highlights the major security concerns that we have repeatedly warned the Department of Homeless Services about,” he said. “This shelter came into Wakefield with no input from the community and over the objections of its residents.”

He pointed out there were about 40 sex offenders living in the shelter and that it had strained the resources of the 47th Precinct with an influx of 911 calls since it opened.

“Project Renewal deals with an incredibly tough population with serious mental health issues, the formerly incarcerated, as well as registered sex offenders,” said Councilman Andrew Cohen (D-Bronx). “This work cannot be done without adequate resources.”

Cohen said he had spoken in February with DHS Commissioner Gilbert Taylor to request more security at the Bronx Boulevard shelter, but that it was not until the intervention of Mayor de Blasio’s office two days after the murder that more peace officers were assigned.

Councilman Andy King (D-Bronx) urged people to remember Charle, but said that if the shelter cannot run safely, it has to go.

A service provider and advocacy group, Homeless Services United, staged its own vigil outside the shelter, joining hands.

“This is not a day for politics,” a statement released by the group said. “It is a day to give thanks for the life of Ana Charle and for the thousands of New Yorkers who work tirelessly every day in their commitment to end homelessness.”

Charle, a native of Spain, lived a quiet life in Whitestone and had two young daughters.

But neighbors of the shelter who attended the rally by and large took a dim view of the facility.

“Right now my tenants want to move out because they have children,” said Orville Johnson, a property owner in the community.

The men from the 108-bed facility follow people around and beg for money, said Wakefield resident Suzie Durgaeersaud. Some of the men in the shelter have made her feel threatened, she added.

Men from the facility go to a closed gas station next to the facility and call out to women and children, said Stanley Basdeo, who said that catcalls and other harassment have scared his wife, who walks home from work past the shelter.

“The ladies are the ones who are being subjected to what is going on here,” he said. “They are the ones being chased and harassed.”