Try GOLD - Free
JORDAN NEELY WAS HERE
New York magazine
|January 01 - 14, 2024
HE HAD PLACES HE BELONGED AND PEOPLE LOOKING OUT FOR HIM. HOW DID HE END UP DYING, ALONE, AT THE HANDS OF A STRANGER ON THE SUBWAY?
FOR A BRIEF PERIOD IN HIS LIFE, starting when he was 12, Jordan Neely had a home. It was on the first floor of a small yellow two-family house in Bayonne, New Jersey, where he lived with his mother, Christie Neely, and her boyfriend, Shawn Southerland. Jordan was Christie’s only child, and the two were “like peas in a pod,” his great-aunt Mildred Mahazu said, “wild about each other, like children playing.” Christie would wake him each morning by calling his name, and she’d fuss over him and insist on washing him before hustling him out the door to meet the bus at 7 a.m. Christie had a light, teasing manner with the people she loved, but with Jordan, she could be strict. Her rules included that Jordan couldn’t skip school and that he should never cook while alone in the house. Christie worked nights at a telemarketing firm near Herald Square in Manhattan, and when she got home, usually around 9:30 or 10 p.m., she’d poke her head into Jordan’s room. Jordan would say “good night,” then stay up playing video games until midnight.
Before moving to Bayonne, Jordan and Christie had stayed in several shelters in New York; Jordan’s 10th birthday passed at the Regent Family Residence, a transitional shelter on the Upper West Side where people go to right themselves as they find work or try to obtain affordable housing. Christie had family and places to live, but she was proud and independent and wanted a place of her own where she and her son could feel settled. While in the shelter, Christie had enrolled in classes to become a paralegal, and that’s how she met Southerland, who sat one seat over. When Christie rented the house in New Jersey, Southerland moved in.
This story is from the January 01 - 14, 2024 edition of New York magazine.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM New York magazine
New York magazine
What’s an Artist Worth?
A wave of New York dealers are leaving galleries to start their own agencies with new ideas about how to build their clients’ careers.
6 mins
June 15–28, 2026
New York magazine
Joyce Carol Oates Can’t Quit
The octogenarian is on her 66th novel and 15th year as an X power user.
9 mins
June 15–28, 2026
New York magazine
Faux Is a Real McNally Restaurant
George McNally is building his first business without his famous dad. He's putting steak-frites on the menu anyway.
1 mins
June 15–28, 2026
New York magazine
Who Is Obama's Megalith For?
His presidential center in Chicago is a nice gesture, but it’s too centered on him.
5 mins
June 15–28, 2026
New York magazine
Days Not Left Behind Paul McCartney's new album feels like an elegant Beatles prequel.
EACH YEAR OR SO, a fresh occasion arises to gather in excitement about the Beatles.
5 mins
June 15–28, 2026
New York magazine
MOTHER F*CKER
After becoming a single mom, I began compulsively dating in order to figure out what kind of woman I wanted to be.
15 mins
June 15–28, 2026
New York magazine
Rom-coms Need an Update Jennifer Lopez and Brett Goldstein's Office Romance gets stuck in old ideas.
WHATEVER MAKES the romantic comedy worthwhile and delightful has been lost in Hollywood.
3 mins
June 15–28, 2026
New York magazine
Jesse Genet
The entrepreneur turned stay-at-home mom extols the joys of running her household with an ever-multiplying staff of AI agents.
6 mins
June 15–28, 2026
New York magazine
YOUR DIGITAL LIFE
We're each attached to years of texts, Slacks, searches, and pictures, an archive of self-incrimination and humiliation that could detonate at any time.
30 mins
June 15–28, 2026
New York magazine
Sam Bankman-Fried's Prison Experiment His life behind bars and his desperate campaign to get free.
SAM BANKMAN-FRIED IS INCARCERATED at a federal prison in Lompoc, California, which sits northwest of Santa Barbara and is dubbed “the City of Arts and Flowers.”
39 mins
June 15–28, 2026
Translate
Change font size

