LAWYER SURVIVES STAB ATTACK BY HUBBY: COPS
By SIMON CRITTLE and LARRY CELONA
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June 18, 2002 -- A newlywed man drunk on Captain Morgan rum repeatedly stabbed his attorney wife with a kitchen knife in their Manhattan apartment early yesterday, sources said.
Paul Farrey, 45, then barricaded himself in the bedroom of their fifth-story pad and stabbed himself, police said.
His wife, Donna Hughes, 40, an associate at downtown law firm D'Amato & Lynch, was found lying in a pool of blood in the hallway outside the apartment.
Police wearing bulletproof vests and helmets climbed out a neighbor's window onto a fire escape and stormed into the bedroom, where they captured Farrey.
The slashing spree happened on the corner of East 37th Street and Second Avenue at 12:05 a.m.
Both Hughes and Farrey were taken to Bellevue Hospital. A hospital spokesman said they were in serious but stable condition.
Cops said Hughes was stabbed in the torso. The knife was recovered at the scene.
A police source said Farrey had been out and arrived home drunk before going berserk. Neighbors said he had been drinking Captain Morgan rum.
After stabbing and punching his wife, he slashed himself across the chest and arms, said the police source.
The couple has been married for about four months, said their next-door neighbor, Anne Corsi.
Corsi said Hughes fled from her knife-welding husband and arrived at their door crying.
"We just heard her screaming and ringing our bell," said Corsi, "By the time I came out, she was on the floor."
"There was blood on her arm and she said he had punched her in the stomach. She was holding her stomach and she threw up. [Police] couldn't get into the bedroom, so they went through our fire escape and climbed into their room," said Corsi