Brooklyn Boro

Trinidad resident convicted of killing sister, former girlfriend

February 9, 2022 Brooklyn Eagle Staff
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Brooklyn District Attorney Eric Gonzalez on Wednesday announced that a former Brooklyn resident has been sentenced to 50 years to life in prison following his conviction on two counts of murder for shooting to death his sister and former girlfriend in July 2002. 

Andre Neverson was sentenced by Brooklyn Supreme Court Justice Danny Chun. He was convicted of two counts of second-degree murder and one count of second-degree criminal possession of a weapon following a jury trial last month.

The defendant, Neverson, 57, of Trinidad and Tobago, then fled Brooklyn and remained at large until his arrest in Bridgeport, Connecticut in 2018.

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On July 8, 2002, Neverson fatally shot his older sister, Patricia Neverson, 39, in her Crown Heights, Brooklyn, home after an ongoing dispute between them. She was shot in the head and body and was found later that same night.

Brooklyn Supreme Court Judge Danny Chun. Eagle file photo by Rob Abruzzese

Later that day, at around 6:20 p.m., Neverson picked up his former girlfriend, Donna Davis, 38, at Audrey Cohen College in Queens. After she got in his minivan, she was never seen again, until, according to the evidence, her body was found on July 11, 2002 dumped in an empty lot in East New York, Brooklyn, with a gunshot wound to her head.
 
Neverson fled Brooklyn, but was apprehended on Sept. 4, 2018, in Bridgeport, Connecticut by the U.S. Marshals Service and returned to Brooklyn.

District Attorney Gonzalez said, “Justice has prevailed in this case and a man who committed two senseless murders nearly 20 years ago will now pay for his actions. I hope that the family and friends of the victims, who waited so many years for some closure, will find solace in today’s sentence.” 

The District Attorney thanked Supervising Paralegal Jannette Ayala and Paralegals Meghan Brancato and Angelika Rostkowska, of the Homicide Bureau, for their assistance on the case.
 
The case was prosecuted by Assistant District Attorney Timothy Gough, Chief of the District Attorney’s Homicide Bureau, and Senior Assistant District Attorney Daniel M. Murphy, also of the Homicide Bureau.


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