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Official: Rapper accused of murder thought man hit on him

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ASSOCIATED PRESS

Nathaniel Glover, center, also known as The Kidd Creole and one of the founding members of the 1980s hip hop group Grandmaster Flash and The Furious Five, was escorted from a New York City Police Department precinct, Wednesday evening, in New York. Glover, 57, was arrested in New York in connection with the fatal stabbing of a homeless man, police said.

NEW YORK >> A New York prosecutor said today that a founding member of Grandmaster Flash and The Furious Five stabbed a homeless man to death in Manhattan after he became enraged because he thought the man believed he was gay and was hitting on him, and he feared he would be robbed.

Rapper Kidd Creole — whose real name is Nathaniel Glover — was returned to jail without bail by Judge Phyllis Chu on Thursday after an initial appearance in a Manhattan criminal court on a second-degree murder charge.

Assistant District Attorney Mark Dahl said Glover, 57, a lyricist with the pioneering group, gave a detailed account of the street encounter in midtown shortly before midnight Tuesday that Dahl described to the judge, saying he wanted to demonstrate “the strength of the case.”

Defense lawyer Patrick Watts told the judge the evidence was “circumstantial” as his calm client stood alongside him, a tightly wound gray braid draped halfway down his back. Outside court, Watts declined comment.

Dahl said Glover was heading to his job at a building where he did security and maintenance when he encountered John Jolly, who asked him: “What’s up?”

Dahl said Glover told him after his arrest that he thought Jolly was hitting on him and thought he was gay “and that infuriated him.”

The prosecutor said Glover kept walking but became convinced Jolly was going to rob him when the 55-year-old man approached him in a “threatening voice and manner,” saying: “All I said to you was ‘What’s up!’”

Dahl said the two men were a foot apart when Glover reached into his left sleeve and pulled out a steak knife that had been tied to his arm with a rubber band, leaving Jolly with two stab wounds to the chest.

Jolly, a registered sex offender who was homeless, picked up a beer after the stabbing and took a swig, the prosecutor said. As blood stains emerged on his chest, he collapsed and was taken to the hospital, where he was declared dead, Dahl said.

Glover, meanwhile, “turned around and went to work” immediately after the stabbing, he said.

The prosecutor said Glover washed blood off his hands and the knife in a bathroom sink at his workplace before deciding to go home after about 15 minutes. He said Glover told him he tossed the knife into a sewer grate in the Bronx.

Jolly had served time for sexually assaulting and attacking a woman. He had been staying at a shelter in the Bowery and had at least 16 prior arrests.

Glover was arrested in 2007 for possession of a gravity knife and had three other arrests dating back to the 1980s.

Grandmaster Flash and The Furious Five is best known for their 1982 rap song, “The Message.” The group formed in the late 1970s in the Bronx.

The group became the first rap act to be inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2007.

Associated Press researcher Rhonda Shafner contributed to this report.

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