Slain Hofstra Grad Joey Comunale to Be Mourned at Connecticut Wake

What to Know

  • A wake will be held in Stamford for 26-year-old Joey Comunale, who police say was stabbed to death earlier this month during a dispute
  • James Rackover, 25, was indicted on charges of concealing a human corpse, tampering with evidence and hindering prosecution
  • Lawrence Dilione, 28, was also arrested last week in Comunale's death

A wake will be held Tuesday for the 26-year-old Hofstra graduate who prosecutors say was stabbed to death in a luxury Manhattan apartment. 

The wake for Joey Comunale will be at Lacerenza Funeral Home in his hometown of Stamford, Connecticut. Funeral services will be held Wednesday morning at St. Leo's Church in Stamford. 

Comunale graduated from Hofstra University with a degree in legal studies in business and was an avid hockey player.

"Joey was very active in Stamford, where he touched hundreds of individuals whether at the hockey rink, softball field or socializing with too many of his friends to mention," according to an obituary published online

"He was one of a kind," Comunale's father, Pat, told reporters from his Connecticut home last Wednesday. "We're just in denial. This is not something that happens to kids like this. I don't know if it was pre-meditated. I don't know how it happened."

"He didn't deserve this," he added. "He didn't go looking for trouble. It wasn't right. This is not right."

Police said Comunale appears to have been stabbed to death in some sort of dispute after he, Rackover, Dilione, and three women returned from the Gilded Lily nightclub on 14th Street late Saturday or early Sunday.

One official said that Comunale was stabbed sometime after the three women left Rackover’s apartment, but police aren't sure how the body was removed from the apartment and taken to a shallow grave in Oceanport, New Jersey. 

On Monday, a grand jury indicted James Rackover, 25, on charges of concealing a human corpse, tampering with evidence and hindering prosecution. Lawrence Dilione, 28, who was also arrested last week in the death of Comunale, surrendered his passport at a court hearing Tuesday, meaning he can be released if he makes the $300,000 cash bail. 

Rackover also continues to be held on $3 million bond or $300,000 cash bail. 

Police initially arrested both men on second-degree murder charges in the death of Comunale, but prosecutors did not bring that charge against them in a criminal complaint pending further investigation. 

Rackover was born James Beaudoin in Florida and has a criminal record, including for burglary. The Broward County Sheriff's office provided NBC News with several mug shots of him from as early as 2007.

He was also charged with driving while intoxicated in New York City in 2015. 

Court records shows that Beaudoin changed his last name to Rackover in 2015 after he was taken under the wing of jeweler-to-the-stars Jeffery Rackover, who owns Jeffrey Rackover Diamonds on Fifth Avenue. The two met in 2013 and became so close that Rackover referred to Beaudoin as his son, according to former NYPD detective Bo Dietl, who is a friend of the famed jeweler.

Rackover was aware of Beaudoin’s rough past and helped him get a job and an apartment in his building after meeting him, Dietl said, adding that Rackover never had kids and embraced Beaudoin as his own.

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