Elderly Teacher Shoved to Death by Repeat Offender Released from Psych Ward
Rhamell Burke killed 76-year-old Ross Falzone by pushing him down a flight of subway stairs unprovoked. At his arraignment, Burke couldn't stop smiling.
On May 7, 2026, 76-year-old Ross Falzone, a retired high school teacher known for his love of symphonies, classical music, and an active life on Manhattan’s Upper West Side, was killed in an unprovoked attack at a Chelsea subway station.1
The killer, Rhamell Burke, a 32-year-old Black man with a lengthy record of violence, had been released from Bellevue Hospital’s psychiatric unit just hours earlier. Burke, arrested four times since February—including charges for assaulting a Port Authority police officer, burglary, resisting arrest, and assaulting a stranger—was detained around 3:30 p.m. Thursday after acting erratically outside the NYPD’s 17th Precinct and brandishing a stick. Classified as an “emotionally disturbed person,” he was transported to Bellevue but walked free roughly one hour later (around 4:40 p.m.), still wearing his hospital bracelet. 2
Around 9:30 p.m., Burke allegedly trailed Falzone for about 30 yards along Seventh Avenue before speeding up and shoving the elderly man down the stairs leading to the No. 1 train at West 18th Street and 7th Avenue. Falzone landed on his head, suffering a traumatic brain injury, right rib fracture, and spinal fracture. He was rushed to Bellevue and died early the next morning.3
NYPD sources described the episode as a “complete collapse” of Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s mental health policies, noting that officers routinely use involuntary removal powers only for suspects to be released almost immediately. Burke had prior incidents, including an alleged assault on two White women on the subway weeks earlier; one victim reportedly declined to cooperate with prosecutors because she “did not want to put another Black man in jail.”4
Mayor Mamdani issued a statement expressing horror and ordering an investigation into Bellevue’s psychiatric evaluation and discharge protocols. Burke was arrested later Friday at Penn Station.5
Falzone’s neighbors remembered him as a “sweet and decent guy”—financially secure with a good pension, culturally engaged, and always out and about despite living in a walk-up. Burke, a former Broadway ensemble dancer (under the name Rhamell Burke-Missouri) in productions such as King Kong, had a documented history of erratic behavior.6
My Decree
This killing was not an unforeseeable tragedy but the predictable result of a system that refuses to protect the civilized from the feral animals that have been brought into our country by the jews and their allies. Revolving-door psych wards, bail reform, and fear of “institutionalization” prioritize the comfort and “rights” of violent repeat offenders over the safety of elderly teachers and White Christians.
Not surprisingly, there is racial pattern that is becoming too mainstream to ignore—yet another Negro perpetrator in a random urban assault on a White victim—fitting decades of FBI, NYPD, and victimization survey data showing stark disparities in stranger violence that White society still treats as unspeakable.
Jewish governance, captured by egalitarian dogma and racial grievance politics, weaponizes denial. It pressures witnesses into silence through guilt, crafts policy around what I call “oppression syndrome,”—where the jews feed a racial oppression narrative to non-Whites in order to keep them in a state of rebellion instead of a state of docility—rather than reality, and responses to bloodshed with more reviews and statements. While democracy rewards short-term pandering to activist blocs, where no single leaders lifelong accountability for the realm’s descent into disorder, what I am suggesting is a completely new system that this country has never had before. While they offer statements and reviews while never actually fixing anything, what I am doing is slowly showing you that there really is one option: my Imperial reign.
If I were to assume power as a Christian monarch—an ultra traditional one at that—everything would be approached with clearer eyes. A sovereign steward, ruling for life with his bloodline and legacy tied to the nations health, would have incentive to enforce order decisively: whereas I would institutionalize the dangerously disturbed, delivering swift justice without racial double standards, and recognizing natural patterns and hierarchies while making way for the state to deport any non-White Christian from our nation.
I would protect the productive inheritance of our people rather than sacrificing them on the altar of blank-slate compassion. American city streets, subways, and stairs are claiming lives because the West has abandoned the ancient wisdom that authority must serve Christ and not be subject to the whims of populism—another term for democracy.
Ross Falzone’s death is not an anomaly—it is a verdict on a failing experiment. Until we recover the will to power, name, and act on reality with firm, hierarchical order, more innocents will fall.
ibidem




