Posted 4:30 p.m. today
Updated 4:31 p.m. today
NEW YORK — DNA evidence, some of it matching what was found beneath the victim’s fingernails, led investigators to make an arrest in last summer’s strangling of a woman who encountered her killer while on an evening run, police said Sunday.
Chanel Lewis, 20, of Brooklyn, faces a murder charge in the Aug. 2 slaying of 30-year-old Karina Vetrano, whose body was found amid the weeds in a marshy park not far from her Queens home. Lewis was expected to be arraigned later Sunday, and it was unclear if he had an attorney.
The closely watched case caused fear among women who run alone and baffled investigators, who for months were unable to find anyone who matched the probable suspect’s DNA that was found under the victim’s fingernails as she fought back. The DNA was also found on her neck and phone.
New York Police Department Chief of Detectives Robert Boyce said the break came after police went back through 911 calls and found one reporting a suspicious person in the area near the attack. Investigators interviewed Lewis on Thursday and obtained a DNA sample from him, which Boyce said was tested and linked to DNA found at the scene and on the victim.
«Karina helped us identify this person,» Boyce said. «She had the DNA under her nails. She had touch DNA on her back and there was more DNA on her cellphone. So three incidents. That’s how we were able to bring this profile up. And that’s how we made the link. »
The detective said that after Lewis was arrested at the home he shares with his mother on Saturday night, he gave incriminating statements on «each step of the assault. » Asked for a more detailed description of Lewis, Boyce declined to comment on the suspect’s mental state or social behavior.
Boyce said the encounter that led to Vetrano’s death apparently was a chance one, and authorities didn’t believe she and Lewis knew each other. Lewis has no prior arrest record, police said.