By LIZ GOFFIt was just another Wendys restaurant, one of dozens in Queens, with
yet another crew working another night shift.
There was Jean, the assistant manager who had, earlier
that day, asked his brother to be the best man at his wedding. He had dreams of going back
to college, starting his own company.


Craig Godineaux (top, above) has been sentenced to life in
prison, while John Taylor is awaiting a trial that is expected to begin sometime early
2002.
Photos Courtesy NYPD
|
"Now I know what I want to do with my life," he told
his brother.
And Anita, eating salads to stay slim, and excited about starting
college in September. She remembered customers favorite foods, gracefully accepted
jabs about her chubby cheeks and was training for a career working with autistic children.
"If you have Anita for a friend, you have the best friend in the
world," said Pamela Truman, unable to speak of her granddaughter in past tense.
There was Ramon, whose greatest joys were moments spent with his
family. He loved to "down a brew" while keeping an eye on a backyard barbecue.
He loved dancing salsa, merengue anything.
"Where he was, its an empty space now," said his
brother Benjamin.
They were part of the Queens melting pot. They came from different
neighborhoods, backgrounds but they all came to the Main Street restaurant on their
way to a brighter future. They would do so by salting the fries, checking the salad bar,
mopping the floors.
Jeremy Mele graduated from high school in June, 1999. Mele moved to
Queens from New Jersey after graduation and was "making it" on his own.
"His pride and joy was his independence," said his younger
brother, Joshua.
And there was Ali Ibadat, remembered by friends in Ridgewood as a
hard-working man who toiled to send money home to his wife and children in Pakistan.
"He worked seven days a week, all year round," said Abdul
Waheed, his closest friend.
A NIGHT THAT ROCKED THE CITY |
Late on Wednesday night, May 24, 2000, the closing-time
routine of Jean Auguste, Anita Smith, Ramon Nazario, Jeremy Mele, Ali Ibadat and two
co-workers, Ja Quione Johnson and Patrick Castro was interrupted. They soon found
themselves bound and gagged, forced to lay in pairs face-down on the floor of a basement
freezer at the restaurant. With plastic bags tied over their heads, they felt the gun. And
the Main Street restaurant would never be just another Wendys, ever again.

The massacre site as it appears today (left) and shrouded by
flowers in the days following the murders.
PRESS Photos by Ira Cohen |
Johnson, who was gravely injured, survived brain surgery
and continues to recover. And Patrick Castro, the Flushing boy-turned-hero, is recovering
from his wounds. He remains under police protection, his life threatened by
"friends" of the massacre mastermind.
Castro, who was shot through his cheeks, worked for 90 minutes to
free himself from the duct tape that bound him. Despite his wounds, he managed to call 911
from a fax phone in the basement. "Were in the basement," he said.
"Were locked in." Castro then untied Johnson and carried him to the street
level, where police found the pair, laying near a counter. Johnson was being cradled by
Castro, who, according to police, was in such shock that he did not realize hed been
shot.
As paramedics rushed to save Johnsons life, Castro waved away
help for himself, telling police, "There are people in the basement who need your
help more than I do."
Thirty-six hours later, Queens detectives had John Taylor, the
mastermind, and his accomplice, Craig Godineaux, in custody. Both men subsequently blamed
each other for the murders, then confessed.
Godineaux, whose confession of ghoulish acts following
the murders that shocked the most hardened investigators, received five life sentences
(without parole) on Feb. 21 for his part in the crimes. He avoided a possible death
sentence by claiming that he is mentally retarded. Godineaux is currently housed at the
Downstate Correctional Facility, where he will be evaluated and a state correctional
facility will be chosen to house him for the rest of his life.
Taylor, still facing the death penalty, is currently residing at Rikers
Island in 23-hour lockup. He was transferred recently from the Manhattan "tombs"
after his part in an attempted inmate breakout branded him a high-security risk.
Taylors trial is expected to begin in early 2002.
The victims of the Wendys massacre have been
remembered in many ways, from a tree planting at the Queens Botanical Gardens, to the
mountains of flowers that were placed outside the restaurant by anonymous mourners in the
days following the massacre.


One year after Anita Smith (top) was brutally murdered
inside the Flushing Wendys where she worked, grandmother Pamela Truman and mother
Jean Truman Smith attended a memorial service this week to honor her memory.
PRESS Photo by Dee Richard
|
Quality Services for the Autistic
Community will present its first annual Anita Smith Memorial Scholarship
on June 28.
The organization where Anita Smith worked
as a volunteer established the fund in her memory.
The group will present a
$1,000 check to its recipient an individual who is pursuing the same career Smith
was striving toward.
And on Thursday, May 24,
Ben Wong, (the new owner of the restaurant site), will present an $18,000 check to Gary
Strong, Director of the Queens Library. The donation will fund an after school program at
the Main Street Library, in memory of the victims.
Wong said that he felt he "just had to
do something" on the anniversary of the massacre to honor the victims memories.
Wong also stipulated that any new business could not reopen at the site until the
anniversary had passed.
Benjamin Nazario, still
deeply grieving his brothers death, has vowed to muster support from local
politicians to change a portion of the 1995 Death Penalty Statute. Nazario wants to
eliminate or change the loophole in the law that paved the way for Craig Godineaux to
avoid the death penalty.
Linda Pardo, fiancé of Jean Auguste, told
the PRESS, "I wake up everyday and think of him. I would do anything to have
him back."
Babbette Mele, sister of Jeremy, said she
is angry at Godineauxs plea. "He (Godineaux) deprived the world of the greatest
person," she said.
Her message to Godineaux: "I can only
hope and pray for the day you will be dead."
One year after her daughters death,
Jean Truman Smith can only be described as heartbroken.
"I wish I could feel her embrace me
with one more hug," Smith said. "With one more kiss."
Wendys officials decided, out of
respect for the victims, to not reopen the restaurant at 40-12 Main St. The storefront was
purchased last December by Wong, who has sub-let it to a group of retailers who are
renovating it for use as a mini-mall.
"For all my life, I have been against
the death penalty," Smith said, adding that the murder of her daughter and the other
victims has "changed her thinking."
"I know that somewhere there is a God
who cares," she said. "These men (Taylor, Godineaux) will be judged by that
God."
Although all signs of the restaurant are
now long-gone, curiosity seekers and passers-by still pause, whispering thoughts and
offering prayers for the victims.
An elderly Asian woman stood outside the
site on Saturday, May 19, praying for peace for the victims spirits. The woman
raised her head slowly, then peered into the brilliant sunlight.
"Mariposa (butterfly)," she said,
putting her hands together, then gently opening and closing them. She pointed to a narrow
piece of plywood nailed to the front of the storefront, where an orange and black
butterfly sat, slowly flapping its wings. Seconds later, it flew away.
The woman again peered into the sun.
"Peace," she said.
A
Killer, In His Own Words
A PRESS Exclusive |
Confessed Wendys massacre
gunman Craig Godineaux offered an apology to the families of his victims on the
anniversary of the murders.
Godineaux, through his Capital Defense Legal
Aid Attorney Colleen Brady, said:
"I know my apology to the families will
never bring their loved ones back.
"I do deserve what I got," Godineaux
said. "I dont expect nobody to accept my apology, what I did was wrong.
"I had no business being there," he
added. "I want to give the families my apology and tell them that I know I deserve
life in jail."