http://www.philly.com/philly/hp/news_update/39189962.htmlPosted on Fri, Feb. 6, 2009
Tape casts doubt on self-defense claim
By STEPHANIE FARR
Philadelphia Daily News
farrs@phillynews.com 215-854-4225
The Rev. Lewis Nash believes that a voice mail detailing the last moments of the life of his first cousin Joseph McNair was a message from the beyond.
"That tape actually dropped out of heaven for us," he said.
McNair, 38, a man with a heavy rap sheet who was living in a high-end Montgomery County community, was shot and killed by his neighbor, off-duty SEPTA policeman Sgt. Darryl Simmons, following an argument last Sept. 17.
Simmons, a 22-year veteran of SEPTA's police force, claimed that the killing had been in self-defense. He shot McNair at least four times because, he said, he thought McNair was reaching for a gun, but no gun of McNair's was found at the scene, according to police.
Nearly five months later, Simmons, 48, has not been charged with a crime, but the Montgomery County District Attorney's Office insists the investigation continues, and initial statements from the office that murder had been ruled out were recanted yesterday.
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Interest was renewed in the case this week, when McNair's relatives released a message he left on a friend's cell phone the night of the killing.
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Then,
before Simmons calls medics or police, he can be heard calling his wife: "Hey. I just shot and killed this b----. I said, 'I just shot this b----.' Yeah, come down to the bottom of the hill. Call 9-1-1."McNair's family believes that the tape proves that the killing was not in self-defense