STATEN
ISLAND, N.Y. -- A Port Richmond felon was convicted yesterday of
manslaughter for slaying a 20-year-old man in a dispute outside the
defendant's home three years ago.
Reginald Bell, however, beat a
more serious second-degree murder charge stemming from the Nov. 28,
2008, stabbing death of Graniteville resident Michael Helferty.
Bell's attorney, Mark J. Fonte, contended that Bell didn't intend to kill Helferty.
Ironically,
Bell, 49, had been hailed as a Good Samaritan five months before the
incident when he chased off two pit bulls that were savaging his
90-year-old neighbor.
Bell, who has an unrelated prior burglary
conviction, faces up to 25 years in prison when sentenced Jan. 4. for
first-degree manslaughter.
"I am very happy that my client was
found not guilty of the intentional murder charge," Fonte said outside
state Supreme Court, St. George. "The jury obviously did not believe the
proof presented by the prosecution."
Fonte said Bell, who did not testify during the trial, is weighing an appeal.
District
Attorney Daniel Donovan said Bell faces a stiff sentence and he hopes
that prospect brings some measure of solace to the victim's family and
loved ones.
"When presented with the evidence, the jury
concluded that Reginald Bell did, in fact, plunge a knife deep into
Michael Helferty's heart after the two had a heated argument outside
Bell's Port Richmond home three years ago," Donovan said in a statement.
"While we firmly believe the defendant did so with the sole aim of
killing Helferty, the jury obviously had some reasonable doubt about the
defendant's intentions, and thus convicted him of first-degree
manslaughter. We respect that decision."
Assistant District Attorneys Jonathan Fogel and Paul A. Capofari prosecuted the case.
According to Fonte, the fatal chain of events was set in motion on Thanksgiving Day 2008.
Bell
and a woman were drinking at the woman's home before heading down to
the block to the defendant's John Street residence later that night.
Early
the next morning, Helferty, the woman's daughter and another man
arrived at Bell's apartment to take the woman home, Fonte said. They
began arguing with Bell and the dispute spilled onto the street.
Prosecutors
contend Bell returned to his apartment to fetch a knife with a "T"-type
handle. He went back outside and plunged the blade into Helferty's
chest, they said.
Fonte said Bell testified before a grand jury
that he had the weapon in his possession to defend himself against
Helferty and his two friends when he first went onto the street.
The
defendant maintained that Helferty approached him and he began
backpedaling. The victim lunged at him, and Bell said he extended his
hands to protect himself. Helferty impaled himself on the blade, Bell
contended.
Prosecutors said Bell wiped the blood off the blade and stowed the knife in his attic.
He went on the lam and was captured three days later in Baltimore.
Five
months earlier, Bell had been lauded for rushing to help 90-year-old
Henry Piotrowski, who was being mauled by two pit bulls in his backyard
on July 1, 2008. Bell called 911, then ran the animals off with a
kitchen knife. Piotrowski died of his wounds the next month.

He got 20 years.
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