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Woman found dead in Manhattan apartment after being followed home, police say

<i>Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images</i><br/>An NYPD vehicle is parked in front of the building where Christina Yuna Lee lived as people take photos on February 14 in the Chinatown neighborhood in New York City.
Getty Images
Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images
An NYPD vehicle is parked in front of the building where Christina Yuna Lee lived as people take photos on February 14 in the Chinatown neighborhood in New York City.

By Liam Reilly and Laura Studley, CNN

A 25-year-old man has been charged with murder after he allegedly followed a woman to her New York apartment and stabbed her dozens of times with a knife early Sunday, prosecutors say.

Surveillance video from the entrance of the Chrystie Street apartment in Manhattan’s Chinatown neighborhood shows Christina Yuna Lee, 35, entering the building around 4:20 a.m. and a man pushing the door open as it closed behind her and following her inside, according to a complaint filed by the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office.

The man, identified by investigators as Assamad Nash, allegedly followed Lee up to the sixth floor of the walk-up apartment while remaining about a flight of stairs below her, according to the video evidence described in the complaint.

When Lee reached the apartment and entered, the man ran to her door and pushed his way inside, according to the complaint. Someone in the building heard a female voice screaming for help, coming from the area of Lee’s apartment, and police responded to a 911 call of a dispute, the complaint says.

Responding officers heard a woman calling for help from inside the apartment when they arrived at about 4:25 a.m., the complaint says, but could not get into the apartment at that time. It’s unclear why officers couldn’t immediately enter the apartment. CNN has reached out to the NYPD for comment.

“They hear the victim calling for help from inside the apartment but then she goes quiet,” the complaint says.

“The defendant imitated a voice of (a) woman when he was in the apartment and said they didn’t need police,” the complaint says.

According to the complaint, at one point, Nash attempted to flee the apartment.

“The Defendant tries to get out through the fire escape but sees an officer on the roof above him and goes back in — the officer saw a yellow object in his hand,” the complaint says.

The NYPD’s Emergency Service Unit was called to the scene and officers were able to enter at approximately 5:40 a.m., prosecutors say. Once inside the apartment, prosecutors say, officers found Lee on the bathroom floor, naked from the waist up, with more than 40 stab wounds, according to body camera footage described in the complaint.

Officials have so far not provided clarity as to why it took officers more than an hour to access the apartment. Mayor Eric Adams’ office did not provide comment when asked about the delay, and the NYPD has not responded.

Prosecutors say body camera footage from police, after making entry, shows Nash was found hiding under the bed with a stab wound to his torso and cuts on his hands and torso. A yellow-handled knife was found behind a dresser in the same room, according to the evidence from the district attorney’s office.

Nash is charged with one count of first-degree murder, one count of first-degree burglary and one count of sexually motivated burglary, according to the court documents.

He’s scheduled to appear in court again Friday, Manhattan district attorney spokeswoman Naomi Puzzello said. Prosecutors say they will request that he is held without bond.

Nash was represented in court by an attorney for the Legal Aid Society, Puzzello said. CNN has reached out to the Legal Aid Society for comment.

Prosecutors say Nash was out on supervised release on three other open cases, including at least one case in which he allegedly punched a stranger on a subway.

It’s not clear whether Lee’s race or ethnicity played a role in the attack, or whether the NYPD’s Hate Crimes Task Force is involved in the investigation, but the killing of an Asian woman in Chinatown has again raised fears in in New York and across the country where Asians have been affected by an increase in anti-Asian violence in recent years, advocates say.

“I and New Yorkers across the city mourn for the innocent woman murdered in her home last night in Chinatown and stand with our Asian brothers and sisters today,” Adams said. “The mission of this administration is clear. We won’t let this violence go unchecked.”

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CNN’s Mirna Alsharif, Kiely Westhoff and Athena Jones contributed to this report.

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