
Neighbors who heard shrill, “high-pitched” screams and saw smoke coming from the elevator called the police. Isaac suffered burns on his hands and face and had already fled. Gillespie, minutes after the attack, was dead on the scene. After hiding on a nearby rooftop and then wandering the streets to find out that he was wanted, Isaac, “reeking of gasoline,” turned himself in at a transit police station on Sunday morning and confessed. He claimed Gillespie owed him "about $2,000 for odd jobs.”
The Times’ follow-up report has more insight on both parties and the nature of their relationship from interviews with neighbors and relatives.
As for the footage of the attack, what the Times calls "a disturbing silent film,” the "sheer, calculated brutality stunned even the most hardened of homicide detectives.” It makes you wonder what other videotaped horrors the NYPD has stored in its archives...