Saturday, 24 January 2015

Lawyer: Sleeping NYU Student Allegedly Set On Fire During A Snapchat "May Have Been Participating"

Jaime Castano was kicked out of the university after the alleged incident.


The lawyer for the former New York University student charged with allegedly setting fire to his sleeping classmate and filming the incident on Snapchat as he sang says the victim was intoxicated and may have been participating in the activity.


The lawyer for the former New York University student charged with allegedly setting fire to his sleeping classmate and filming the incident on Snapchat as he sang says the victim was intoxicated and may have been participating in the activity.


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Jaime V. Castano, 20, re-appeared in court on Friday after being arraigned on first-degree assault and reckless endangerment charges in connection with the incident, which allegedly took place in an NYU dormitory on the night of Aug. 23–24, 2014.


The alleged victim told authorities she fell asleep in the room with Castano and another person, before waking up the next morning to discover burn marks on her clothing and comforter, as well as painful burns on her torso, a New York District Attorney's Office spokesperson told BuzzFeed News.


Castano allegedly admitted to filming the incident, which showed the alleged victim waking up to extinguish the flames as Castano sang. BuzzFeed News understands the victim later watched a Snapchat of the alleged incident.


The woman reported the incident to university officials, who expelled Castano in September after an internal investigation, but NYU did not report the incident to police until late October. Castano was eventually arrested on Jan. 19.


Castano faces up to 25 years in prison if convicted of first degree assault.



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His lawyer, Alyssa Gamliel, told the court on Tuesday that the unnamed victim had been drunk at the time of the incident, the NY Daily News reported.


"I do not think she knows what happened or her participation in this, nor do I think the People will be able to prove that she was not sort of participating in some of this activity," Gamliel told the judge.


She also suggested the victim's injuries worsened as a result of her failure to treat them properly, perhaps due to her "continued behavior of intoxication."




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