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Alarming video captures NYC building super kick tenant down stairs, beat him with wrench

NEW YORK â A Manhattan building superintendent was arrested Saturday after he was caught on camera kicking a tenant down two flights of stairs. https://www.cbsnews.com/newyork/news/video-nyc-superintendent-kicks-tenant-down-stairs/ Police say 45-year-old Nick Valentin is now charged with second-degree assault, a felony that could land him in prison if he is found guilty. It happened inside an apartment building on East 112th Street near Third Avenue in East Harlem. Video from a doorbell camera recorded just after 8 a.m. Saturday shows a 26-year-old tenant getting kicked down a flight of stairs, police say by the building super. The attacker then picks up a wrench and continues beating the tenant. Seconds later, as the tenant begins to walk away, the attacker kicks him down another flight of stairs. Police say the attack happened after a dispute over rent, and the victim sustained lacerations to his right hand and had pain in his left arm. According to police, another tenant called 911 to report the attack. Valentin has no criminal history, according to police sources. CBS News New York made several attempts to contact Valentin and the building's owner to hear their side of the story. So far, those requests have gone unanswered.

Nick Valentin, 45, was seen kicking a 26-year-old tenant down a flight of stairs around 8 a.m. Saturday at the building on 112th Street near Third Avenue, according to his criminal complaint.

Video captured by a doorbell camera and obtained by CBS News showed him picking up a wrench to continue to beat the tenant as he stumbled down another flight of stairs.

Valentin was charged with one count of second-degree assault in connection to the incident, which was provoked by a verbal dispute, authorities said.

The attacker does not reside inside the building, according to cops.

The victim sustained lacerations to his right hand and had pain in his left arm. Cops observed the tenant’s arm to be visibly swollen, court records show.

He was transported to Cornell Medical Center and was reported in stable condition, according to police.

An urgent 911 call by a tenant in the building led to Valentin’s arrest, according to CBS.

Neighbors expressed shock at the news of the incident. “I think that is not the way that you’re going to get your rent at all,” Michael Velasquez, who lives near the apartment, told CBS News.

Another tenant told the outlet he was “very alarmed” by the video and mentioned he’s repeatedly raised concerns about health and safety in the building.

Valentin pleaded not guilty and was released on his own recognizance without bail in Manhattan court Sunday.

Valentin, the attacker, has no prior criminal record, according to police.

He is set to return to court on October 17.

He is set to return to court on October 17.

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