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How the
New York Daily News broke the story:
“The House of Terror”, November 3, 1987
(Mark Gado) |
Officer Vincent Daluise made his way up the
narrow, darkened hallway of 14 West 10th Street in New York’s
Greenwich Village. It was 6:40 a.m. on November 2, 1987. The building,
a classical brownstone, was constructed in the 19th century and was
Mark Twain’s home. Although the West Village is just a short walk from
fast-paced midtown Manhattan, it retains the cozy atmosphere of a
small, tight-knit community with tree-lined streets and trendy,
outdoor cafes. Tenth Street contains dozens of brownstones and 19th
century buildings that are expensive, much sought after, and
reminiscent of a bygone era.
The cops, along with emergency medical service
(EMS) personnel, arrived at the quiet apartment on the second floor.
They knocked several times and received no answer. They were
dispatched to this address on a “job” of a child not breathing. Since
there was no response, they banged again with the bottom of their
fists on the wooden door.
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14 West 10th Street, New York City (Mark
Gado) |
“Police!” Officer Daluise yelled, “Open up!”
There was another pause. The door opened very slowly and a woman’s
face peeked through the slim opening. It was dark inside. Daluise
could barely make out details, but her face appeared bruised, mangled,
swollen. He thought it was an older woman. She said nothing at first
but when asked if she called the police, she said, “Yes.” As the cops
and EMS workers entered the apartment and before they could react to
anything else, a man came out of another darkened room. He was
carrying a naked child in his arms by the armpits. The child was a
little girl, unconscious, bruised and blue. The man said that she had
just eaten something and vomited. He told the police he didn’t know
what happened to her except that she passed out. Then he said that she
had been vomiting since the night before. Cops saw additional bruising
and welts on the little girl’s back. She was filthy. Her feet were
coal-black and it appeared she hadn’t been bathed in a long, long
time.
In the back of the room, cops saw the dim figure
of a baby. When they investigated further, they saw that the infant
was lying on the floor and tied to a playpen with a length of rope
around his waist. His clothes were soaked with urine and his body was
covered with dirt. The female that answered the door was wandering
around the apartment, hiding behind doors and rubbing her hands
together. Her face had cuts and bruises around her eyes and nose. Her
lip was split. Later, when she was examined at Bellevue Hospital,
doctors found she had several broken ribs, a fractured jaw, a broken
nose and severely ulcerated legs. She claimed all her injuries were
the result of a fall.
The medics worked feverishly on the girl who was
barely breathing and not responding to their efforts. There were red
marks on her chest, abdomen and arms. Her long, sandy colored hair was
filthy, matted and tangled. The man, who said he was the father,
rambled on, offering several different versions of how the girl wound
up in such a state. He said that when he saw she wasn’t breathing, he
gave her CPR. What the medics could not have known at the time was
that the girl was suffering from a severe brain injury. She was
already in a fatal coma from which she would never emerge. Soon, she
would be “brain dead,” a condition in which the brain emits no
discernible activity. It is New York’s legal standard for death.
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| Elizabeth 'Lisa' Steinberg
(AP) |
The girl’s name was Elizabeth Steinberg, known
to all as “Lisa.” She was six years old. Lisa was allegedly adopted by
the man and woman in the apartment and had lived with them almost
since birth. The adoptive father’s name was Joel Steinberg and the
mother’s name was Hedda Nussbaum. He was an attorney who worked the
criminal courts in Manhattan; she was a former editor and writer of
children’s books for Random House, one of New York’s most famous
publishing houses. And together, over a period of six years, they oversaw the sad, anguished life of a little girl who never had a chance against the brutality, neglect and ultimate destruction by two people whose callousness and parental abdication became symbolic of child abuse in America.
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