The loved ones of the first -degree teacher of Bronx fatally fired by her boyfriend, who touched her own life two days later she called the murderer an “evil coward” and declared that “God will take care of him.”
Jessica Hoyle, 31, who taught at Children’s School Aide College Prep Charter School, was a deadly shot in the head during a fight with her boyfriend around 11 pm April 1 inside her home in Mickle Avenue in Williamsbridge, police said.
Her boyfriend, Shannon Graham, 35, died from a self -inflicted gunshot wound when the police approached him in an apartment building in Pratt Avenue in Eastchester on Thursday afternoon, the sources said.
“Whether or not to commit suicide, whether we have justice or not … for me, is it really justice?” Hoyle’s best friend, Tessa Attarab, told the post in a Monday night vigil.
“Because it has gone. Regardless of how it ends, it has still left. We cannot bring it back.”
But Attarab said he is sure that “God will deal with Him” and hopes “burning in hell.”
“And that is justice for me,” said Attarab. “Because you know, to be honest, after what he did, I don’t think he deserves to breathe.”
Attarab said that he has not sneak up since the murder, and he has been surprised by sending messages to his late friend on Instagram.
“I know it sounds crazy, but maybe it gives me some kind of healing,” said Attarab.
Attarab, now a mother who stays at home, said she and Hoyle in 2012 work in retail trade in Marshall’s in Harlem and then attended Dutches Community College together.
Their friendship grew while working together again at the Bronx Autonomous School, where Hoyle taught in the first degree, an attarab work helped his land.
She said she never noticed direct signs of domestic violence in Hoyle and Graham’s relationship.
“As I knew they had problems, because people have done problems, you know, simple things,” said Attarab. “As perhaps jealousy, insecurity, you know, things like this … unless she maintained things, I don’t know. But not to the point that I thought I would kill her.”
Hoyle was a selfless and positive person who took care of his students, his mother and his sister, AttapTeb added.
When the family threw blue balloons in the sky, the mother of Hoyle, Lisa Cabassa, seemed to murmur “Amen”, before the crowd “long live Jessica!”
Cabassa described his late daughter as the family caregiver.
“I don’t know what to do, and I have to do better, because no, I was in the hospital and she took care of me,” said the distressed mother. “I have to be fine. I don’t know how.”
The night of the shooting, Cabassa, who uses a wheelchair and lives down in Mickle Avenue’s house, told the police that Hoyle and Graham had been discussing all day before listening to an explosion, which led her to call 911, the police.
The defender of Anti-Domestic Bishop Boyde SingleTary violence, who helped organize vigil, said Hoyle was an educator and an “amazing, loving, giving” person.
“He took care of the new family, and she was a dynamic teacher who cared and loved her students,” Singlety told The Post. “She loved her job and loved her friends.”
He described his murderer suspended as an “evil coward.”
“This man taught him life, you know, he shot him in his head, and then, a couple of days later, he committed suicide, his own self.”
SingleTary criticized what he described as a spiral armed violence in the city, especially against women.
“There are too many women who are losing, good people who are losing, domestic violence due to armed violence,” he said.
If you or some who know are affected by any of the problems raised in this story, call the National Direct Line of Domestic Violence to 1,800,799. SAFE (7233) or the text begins at 88788.
]