Mr. Saleh, 33, was found dismembered and decapitated inside his Manhattan apartment.
Fahim Saleh was born in Saudi Arabia to Bangladeshi parents who eventually settled near Poughkeepsie, N.Y.
The former personal assistant of a young tech entrepreneur who was found decapitated and dismembered in his Manhattan apartment was arrested on Friday and charged with murder, the police said.
The entrepreneur, Fahim Saleh, 33, was discovered dead on Tuesday afternoon by his cousin inside his $2.25 million condo in a luxury building on the Lower East Side, the police said. The cousin had gone to check in on him after not hearing from him for about a day.
Mr. Saleh’s head and limbs had been removed, and parts of his body had been placed in large plastic bags designed for construction debris. An electric saw was still plugged in nearby.
The former assistant, Tyrese Devon Haspil, 21, had worked for Mr. Saleh since he was 16, officials with knowledge of the investigation said
An executive assistant who embezzled $100,000 from global tech magnate Fahim Saleh was charged Friday with the grisly murder of his boss, leaving his decapitated and dismembered corpse to rot inside the victim’s ritzy Manhattan condo, police said.
Ex-employee Tyrese Devon Haspil, 21, was charged with second-degree murder in the death of the 33-year-old tech CEO, whose body was discovered Tuesday in the living room of his $2 million Lower East Side apartment, said NYPD Chief of Detectives Rodney Harrison.
Saleh was attacked at about 1:45 p.m. on Monday as he exited a private elevator into his seventh-floor apartment with Haspil, two sources said. The dead man’s cousin made the gruesome discovery a day later, according to Harrison.
Haspil duties included handling Saleh’s finances and personal business, according to sources.
Saleh was willing to work out a deal where Haspil could pay back the stolen cash without any criminal charges. But the plan fell apart when the assistant decided to erase the debt with a Taser, a knife and an electric saw, the sources said.
Harrison took no questions from reporters on Friday about the high-profile murder.
Cops said Haspil, bizarrely dressed in a ninja mask, expensive suit and tie, zapped Saleh and fatally stabbed the victim in the neck and chest before carving up the body using a saw purchased with his own credit card.
The killer fled the grotesque scene just before the relative discovered Saleh’s body, leaving the power tool behind, sources said.
A Taser prong found on Saleh’s body bore a serial number that also connected Haspil to the murder, according to sources.
A source said Haspil, who has no prior criminal record, asked for a lawyer right away and made no statements to police at the 7th precinct.
Stunned neighbors, used to seeing the suspect in the building gym or the elevator, watched as detectives descended on his Brooklyn apartment near Prospect Park.
“To think the guy who may have done this lived two floors below me,” said photographer Lisa Hancock, 53. “It was just so brutal, and it sounds like it was planned ... It’s shocking. It’s crazy.”
Cops had theorized that Haspil intended to remove the body and scrub the crime scene clean — but bolted down the stairs as Saleh’s cousin rode the elevator up to the E. Houston St. condo.
Saleh co-founded the Nigerian motorcycle ride-sharing service Gokada.
“There are no words or actions to provide any of us comfort except the capture of the person who exhibited nothing short of evil upon our loved one,” the family said in a statement to the Daily News on Thursday.
Tech CEO Fahim Saleh’s personal assistant arrested in gruesome slaying
New York City police suspect the stabbing and dismemberment of the 33-year-old entrepreneur was tied to stolen money
A female family member discovered the remains on Tuesday when she checked on Saleh after not hearing from him, NYPD Detectives Chief Rodney Harrison said during a news briefing Friday. Harrison said the family member was a cousin, but initial reports said it was Saleh’s sister. Harrison did not take questions or address the discrepancy.
Police earlier said she may have interrupted Haspil when she buzzed Saleh’s unit from the building’s entry, and they suspect he escaped down a service entrance.
Haspil was arrested Friday morning outside a building in the city’s SoHo neighborhood, Harrison said. Haspil faces second-degree murder and other charges and was expected to be arraigned later Friday.
The gruesome killing shocked neighbors and the tech and venture capital worlds, where Saleh, a founding partner at Adventure Capital, cultivated a reputation as an energetic and creative businessman who specialized in direct investment in developing nations. His ride-hailing apps in Nigeria, Gokada, and his parents’ native Bangladesh, Pathao, grew to be worth hundreds of millions of dollars.
“Fahim is more than what you are reading,” his family said in a Wednesday statement. “He is so much more. His brilliant and innovative mind took everyone who was a part of his world on a journey and he made sure never to leave anyone behind.”
Haspil was Saleh’s executive assistant and “handled his finances and personal matters,” Harrison said. “It is also believed that he owed the victim a significant amount of money.”
Saleh recently discovered that Haspil — who’d worked for him for five years — stole roughly $90,000 from him, the New York Times reported, citing unnamed law enforcement officials. Saleh did not file a police report, the Times noted, choosing instead to fire Haspil and offer to set up a repayment plan.
Police say Haspil, dressed in a black three-piece suit, followed Saleh into the key-card secured elevator that led to his seventh-floor apartment and attacked him when the elevator stopped. He disabled Saleh with a Taser, police told the Times, and stabbed him several times in the neck and torso.
Police say Haspil left the apartment to obtain cleaning supplies from Home Depot, then returned to dismember Saleh’s body and erase any potential DNA evidence, even using a handheld vacuum to clean the elevator.
Born in Saudi Arabia to Bangladeshi parents, Saleh was raised in Upstate New York and earned a computer science degree from Bentley University, an elite private school in Waltham, Mass. He started building websites as a child; his first was Salehfamily.com, which relatives used to coordinate family gatherings, according to a 2016 blog profile.
By the time he was 15, he published a blogging site where friends took turns posting comments and then replying to each other. After it began turning a modest income, Saleh branched out and developed other sites, leveraging advertisements.
“I just sat at my house in my pajamas, created something, placed some ads and generated revenue,” he told the blog Radiche. “That showed promise that it could actually be successful and I could make money off this.”
“I would stay up super late, work on it and would be worried my dad would catch me,” he added. “He thought it would hinder my schoolwork, which it didn’t. Then, I got my first paycheck from Google for $500 as a teenager and showed it to my dad. He was like, ‘Okay, let’s open an account.’ The same website was sold on eBay for $2,000.”
During his years at Bentley, he canvassed restaurants around Boston to create a Facebook food delivery app. After graduating in 2009, he launched Prank Dial, a prank-calling app that allows users to pay to send a prerecorded call to a friend. By 2018, Saleh wrote in a Medium post, the site had generated more than $10 million in revenue.
“What an honour it is to have been led by you Fahim,” Gokada tweeted. “Your teachings on safety, efficiency and kindness will continue to follow us as we uphold the legacy which you successfully began.”
A former employee has been arrested in the grisly murder of tech CEO Fahim Saleh, sources told The Post Friday.
Tyrese Devon Haspil, 21, is in custody and expected to be charged with the murder of Saleh — who was found decapitated and dismembered inside his Lower East Side apartment on Tuesday, the sources said.
Haspil worked as Saleh’s chief of staff at his venture capital firm Adventure Capital — but acted as his personal assistant.
The motive behind Saleh’s slaying allegedly involves stolen cash, sources said.
The entrepreneur, 33, learned that Haspil allegedly swiped $100,000 from him — but instead of ratting him out to authorities, he brokered a repayment plan with the younger man.
But at some point, Haspil allegedly reneged on the deal.
“This was an act of charity that turned into an act of murder,” the source said.
Saleh’s body was discovered Tuesday by a concerned cousin who hadn’t heard from him in days, sources previously told The Post.
Saleh’s body was discovered Tuesday by a concerned cousin who hadn’t heard from him in days, sources previously told The Post.
Fahim SalehInstagram
He was killed Monday, with Haspil allegedly first zapping him with a Taser and then fatally stabbing him, the New York Times reported. Haspil then allegedly returned the next day to chop up Saleh’s body and clean up the crime scene.
He was killed Monday, with Haspil allegedly first zapping him with a Taser and then fatally stabbing him, the New York Times reported. Haspil then allegedly returned the next day to chop up Saleh’s body and clean up the crime scene.
Security footage from inside the elevator shows Haspil using a portable vacuum to try and cover his tracks, the Times said.
Sources told The Post that investigators linked Haspil to the slaying through forensic evidence left behind on the Taser.
Surveillance video from Saleh’s East Houston Street apartment building shows the businessman and a smartly dressed Haspil riding together in the elevator — which opens straight out to his apartment — on Monday afternoon. It was the last time Saleh was seen alive.