Friday, April 20, 2012

Aren't There Easier Ways To Get A Recipe For Foie Gras?


Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/robber-fatally-shoots-man-bronx-steals-iphone-article-1.1064111#ixzz1sbCS81kt

A hardworking young chef was gunned down in the Bronx early Thursday by a brutal thief who kicked his motionless body, stole his iPhone and then casually strolled away, sources told the Daily News.
Former Sunday school teacher Hwang Yang, 26, was left bleeding in the middle of a leafy Riverdale street around 12:30 a.m. - a bullet lodged in his chest - as his adoring mom fretted he was late returning to the family's home just two blocks away, police and family sources said.
Yang had just finished a shift at his new job as a cold-plate chef at The Modern, the upscale French-American restaurant at the Museum of Modern Art in Manhattan, sources said.
He often called for a ride home from his Kingsbridge subway stop, but this time he made the trek up West 232nd St. alone, a grieving relative said.
"He usually would call his dad to pick him up. Today he just decided to walk up," cousin Peter Han, 30, said. "Maybe he just didn't want his dad driving in the rain."
Mom Hyun Sub Yang, 50, a nail salon worker, wailed in pain and pounded on the iron gate in front of the family's home Thursday after a trip to view her only son's body.
"She kept calling him (last night), and no one answered," friend Ji Park, 52, a nearby grocery owner, said.
Hyun Sub Yang later clutched one of her son’s shirts to her face for a trip to meet the family's pastor.
"She has his clothes," Park said. "She said, 'I have to be smelling him.'"
Park said the heartbroken mom blames herself.
"She says, 'I should have picked him up at the train station,'" Park said.
Relatives said Yang's iPhone was a prized possession, a rare luxury he purchased last October.
The South Korea native who emigrated to the U.S. as a young boy only recently received his green card, relatives said, and he dreamed of returning to Seoul as a chef.
His dreams were cut short when a gunman in a gray hooded sweatshirt opened fire on 232nd St. near Ewen Park, a witness said.
Park said she previously urged Yang's mother to make the dutiful son take an express bus home from work, but the former Sunday school teacher at St. John Nam Church on White Plains Rd. was counting his pennies.
"The boy, he doesn't want to pay $5.50 (for the bus). He's working hard. He's trying to save money. He's not a fooling-around boy. He's very responsible. He never asked his mother for money," Park said.

"(The suspect) grabbed one of his arms and rolled him over. Then he gave him a little kick. I'm not sure if he was checking to see if he responded," the witness said. "I left to call 911, and when I returned to the window, the guy who had been running was now casually strolling up the hill."
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The suspect climbed into the front passenger side of a silver minivan, and the vehicle rolled away, the witness said.
Family members broke down in tears Thursday morning as they visited the crime scene.
Yang's younger sister, 24, fell to her knees, sobbing, while her father put his hands over his face and cried.
"He was very young, very young," the victim's distraught uncle, Jun Lee, said.
"He's a very, very good boy," Park added. "He never drank. He never even smoked. That's why his mom is so proud of him."
ndillon@nydailynews.com


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