Woman Pleads Guilty to Fatally Shoving Broadway Singing Coach, Age 87, Avoiding a Long Prison Stay

The Associated Press
By The Associated Press
August 25, 2023US News
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Woman Pleads Guilty to Fatally Shoving Broadway Singing Coach, Age 87, Avoiding a Long Prison Stay
Lauren Pazienza appears in court in New York on Aug. 23, 2023. (Curtis Means/Pool Photo via AP)

NEW YORK—A woman who killed an 87-year-old Broadway singing coach by shoving her onto a Manhattan sidewalk has avoided a lengthy prison sentence by pleading guilty to manslaughter on Wednesday, and will instead serve eight years behind bars.

Lauren Pazienza, 28, teared up in court as she admitted randomly attacking Barbara Maier Gustern on March 10, 2022. Ms. Gustern, whose students included “Blondie” singer Debbie Harry, lay bleeding on a sidewalk as Ms. Pazienza walked away, prosecutors said. She died five days later.

“Today’s plea holds Pazienza accountable for her deadly actions,” Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg said in a statement.

Ms. Gustern’s relatives, some of whom were in court, said they were disappointed with Ms. Pazienza’s plea deal and agreed-upon prison sentence—a fraction of the maximum 25 years she would’ve faced if convicted at trial.

Ms. Pazienza’s lawyer Arthur Aidala declined to comment.

Ms. Pazienza, a former event planner originally from Long Island, has been locked up at the city’s notorious Rikers Island jail complex since a judge revoked her bail in May 2022. She is scheduled to be formally sentenced Sept. 29. The time she’s already served will be counted toward her sentence.

According to prosecutors, Ms. Pazienza attacked Ms. Gustern after storming out of a nearby park, where she and her fiance had been eating meals from a food cart.

Ms. Gustern had just left her apartment to catch a student’s performance after hosting a rehearsal for a cabaret show, friends told The New York Times.

Ms. Pazienza, who’d had several glasses of wine earlier while celebrating a milestone in her wedding countdown, was upset because the park in Manhattan’s Chelsea neighborhood was closing and she and her fiance were told to leave, prosecutors said.

Ms. Pazienza encountered Ms. Gustern on West 23rd Street and shoved her to the ground in what police called “an unprovoked, senseless attack,” prosecutors said. Ms. Gustern hit her head and was critically injured. She died March 15.

In an interview with police, Ms. Pazienza’s fiance said she told him about the episode and said Ms. Gustern “might have said something” to her, although she wasn’t sure.

Ms. Gustern had been known in the theater world for decades.

She worked with singers ranging from the cast members of the 2019 Broadway revival of the musical “Oklahoma!” to experimental theater artist and 2017 MacArthur “genius grant” recipient Taylor Mac, who told the Times she was “one of the great humans that I’ve encountered.”

Her late husband, Joe Gustern, was also a singer, with credits including “The Phantom of the Opera” on Broadway.

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