
patriotnewsdaily.com — The same Park Slope building saw two women stabbed to death in 2026 and a murder-suicide in 2024, but the real story is how a single Brooklyn address became a magnet for violent headlines and shaky early narratives.
Story Snapshot
- One Park Slope building now carries two separate double-fatality cases in just two years.
- The 2024 incident was a gun murder-suicide inside an apartment; the later case involved a deli stabbing of twin sisters.
- Police quickly identified a 20-year-old suspect in the stabbing and say video and clothing back up their theory.
- Media framing, thin facts, and the building’s bloody history shaped public perception long before full evidence emerged.
A Brooklyn address that keeps returning to the crime tape
Park Slope sells itself as the safe, stroller-packed Brooklyn of real estate brochures, which makes one particular building’s recent record of violent death feel like a crack in the façade. News coverage documents that in January 2024, police found two adults dead inside an apartment on 2nd Street, both with gunshot wounds, a gun next to one body, and investigators treating it as an apparent murder-suicide.[1][4] Less than two years later, the same address turned up again, this time with blood on the sidewalk.
Reporters did not need to stretch for a hook; they already had one. Once a location carries a prior homicide, every new siren there sounds louder. Coverage of the later case focused on two young women—twin sisters—stabbed in or near a deli linked to that building, one killed and the other seriously injured.[3][5] Neighbors who had just processed one tragedy suddenly watched detectives swarm the block again, and many did what people everywhere do now: reached for a pattern even before police finished their first canvass.
What police say happened inside and outside the deli
CBS New York’s reporting sketches the outlines of the stabbing case that prosecutors now rely on.[3] According to their coverage, police identified 20-year-old Veo Kelly as the suspect in the attack and say part of his encounter with the sisters was captured on deli surveillance video.[3] Sources described a sequence that began with a chance meeting connected to a nearby party hall, a request for contact information, and an escalation when the women rejected him—turning a routine Brooklyn night into a fatal confrontation with a knife.
Police sources also told CBS that investigators executed a search warrant at Kelly’s home and recovered clothing they believe he wore the day of the stabbing, a classic step in building a circumstantial case that can later be tested for DNA or blood.[3] At the same time, CBS reported that the weapon used in the attack had not been recovered, creating a gap that any good defense attorney will highlight.[3] Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)-quality forensics are not necessary for a state murder case, but juries notice missing blades when the entire story turns on who held the knife.
From “murder-suicide” to “twin stabbing”: same building, different realities
The earlier case inside the building could not look more different on the facts. News 12 reported that officers responding to a wellness call discovered 34-year-old Jason Jackson and 34-year-old Olga Kirshenbaum dead from gunshot wounds in a 2nd Street apartment, with a gun lying next to Jackson and detectives treating the scene as an apparent murder-suicide.[1][4] That case involves adults in their thirties, a firearm, and a private domestic setting; the later stabbing centers a public commercial space, a blade, and teenagers.
American common sense says you do not conflate a gun murder-suicide with a sidewalk-adjacent stabbing simply because they share a street address. The earlier file may matter to landlords, security planners, and insurers, but it does not tell you who confronted twin sisters by a deli door. Conservative readers skeptical of media narrative-building are right to push back when headlines lean on the “same building” angle as if it proves anything more than geography.[1][4] Location overlap is not motive, and it is certainly not identity.
How early narratives and bias filled the information vacuum
The gap between first-night headlines and later evidence is where most of the damage to public understanding happens. In the stabbing, initial chatter pointed vaguely to “men” outside or inside the store, an almost archetypal New York fear-story built more on mood than on documents.[2] That kind of framing can harden fast, especially online, even though the early record in your materials contains no police report, charging document, or sworn eyewitness statement naming any particular man as the killer.[2]
Once outlets reported that Veo Kelly had turned himself in, been charged with murder, and was linked by both video and clothing to the attack, the narrative flipped from “shadowy men” to a single named suspect.[3][5] Yet crucial pieces remain undisclosed: the actual surveillance footage, the full 911 and dispatch logs, body-worn camera video, and the medical examiner’s report on wound patterns. Those records would let the public test whether the encounter inside the deli truly unfolded the way sources say or whether key details shifted as the case matured.[3][5]
What a sober, law-and-order lens sees here
From a traditional law-and-order perspective, this Park Slope building is a cautionary tale on two fronts: a neighborhood that is less insulated from lethal violence than its marketing suggests, and a media culture that races to sell a story before the ink dries on the first police memo. A responsible approach emphasizes what is documented—two dead from gunfire in 2024, two sisters stabbed in a later case, a named suspect tied by video and clothing, and a missing weapon—while refusing to spin sinister patterns from a shared doorway.[1][3][4][5]
Sources:
[1] Web – Two women found stabbed to death in Park Slope building that was once …
[2] Web – Nypd Identifies 2 Killed In Apparent Murder … – News 12 | New Jersey
[3] YouTube – Community devastated after Brooklyn stabbing
[4] Web – Suspect in deadly stabbing of twin in Brooklyn identified, sources say
[5] Web – Nypd Identifies 2 Killed In Apparent Murder Suicide In Park Slope
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