Bronx murder victim, 24, was about to become a dad, start ‘dream job’ as teacher


A victim of homicide from the Bronx was a few weeks to start his dream teaching job and the months of welcoming his first child with his longtime girlfriend when he was shot down near his Bronx apartment, the Daily News learned.
Half Dayshawn Dick, 24, was looking forward to starting his new job at the PREPARATORY CHARTER SCHOOL CAPITAL when he was shot in the head after being disputed with three men near Debs Place and Dreiser LOOP at Co-OP City around 7 p.m. on August 12.
Doctors precipitated Dick at Jacobi Medical Center, where he died three days later, his family said.
Dick “was passionate about being a model for young black men, and his career reflected this commitment,” said his cousin Gisell Bennet, praising his funeral.
“He encouraged others to continue his studies, finish his studies and endeavor. He dreamed of becoming a spokesperson, leader and voice for change. In many ways, he had already entered this role. ”
Two weeks before his death, Dick had accepted a job as a eighth year science teacher at “his dream school,” said Bennet.
“He entered and he took us away,” said his new boss, Simone Hartley-Brooks, director of Capital Preparatory School, during her funeral. “He is intelligent, passionate. I saw in him someone we needed in our school for young boys, someone who would have left an impression of a lifetime, someone they needed,” she said. “We will miss.”
The three -year -old Dick girlfriend is pregnant and has to give birth in December, according to Dick’s Ownology.
“The little family they have created will forever be a living testimony of the love they have shared,” said Blower. “The greatest joy of Demitri came from the love he gave and received. He was a dedicated father – a supplier, a protector and a man with the biggest heart. ”
Dick graduated from Fordham University in 2023 with a bachelor’s degree in political science and pursued higher education at the time of his death. Fordham University has confirmed its undergraduate diploma and said it had taken courses at the Gabelli School of Business during the summer.
“Our community is broken by this tragic loss, and our thoughts and prayers are with the family and relatives of the student,” said Fordham in a statement.
In addition to his passion for education, Dick loved sports and was a talented athlete. He was a wide receiver of his high school football team in Mount Saint Michael Academy. He had been a teacher for three years at the time of his death. He also loved video games, cars, food and fashion, according to his Billology.
“Good food, fashion and impeccable cars were three of the greatest joys of half,” said Bennet. “He never refused a plate of shrimp with curry or chicken perfectly fried. His love for cars was undeniable.”
He was not immediately clear what was the argument that led to the end of his life. The killers fled after the shooting and have not yet been found, according to the police.
Dick’s death is one of the many tragic cases of armed violence that torn the Bronx this summer.
After five murders in six days, plus several other injured people, Mayor Eric Adams on August 28 announced the deployment of an additional 1,000 cops in the Bronx.
Four days earlier, a mass shooting broke out in a Bronx park during a basketball tournament, leaving a dead man, a teenager hanging on life and three other injured. More than 60 balls were fired around 7:25 p.m. in Haffen Park in Baychester, hitting Jaceil Banks, 32, in the chest and Anthonaya Campbell, 17, in the head.
The doctors precipitated the two victims at the Jacobi Medical Center, where Banks died and Campbell was listed in critical condition with a bullet housed behind his eye. Police arrested four suspects in this shooting, including two minors.
Despite the reinforced police presence of the district, violence continued on labor day, when a man was killed and four men were injured when four shooters opened fire on a group outside a Alleron smoke workshop. Five suspects, the youngest 16, were arrested and faced accusations of murder.
The Bronx has seen more shots this year than Manhattan, Queens and Staten Island combined.
About a third of all the city murders this year – 69 out of 206 – occurred in the Bronx. Despite violence, the Bronx has experienced a 19% drop in shots so far this year compared to last year, to 178 against 220 people affected by gunshots at the end of August.




