Shortly before 5 a.m., Rockets Redglare left Sid and Nancy's room and spotted "
At about 7:30 a.m., the sound of a woman moaning woke Vera Mendelssohn, a 48-year-old sculptor who lived in Room 102. She believed the moaning came from the room next door, Room 100. Mendelssohn later described the sound as "coming from a person who was alone." She said she was "very frightened" and stayed in bed rather than getting up to investigate. The moaning eventually stopped, and Mendelssohn went back to sleep.
Two hours later Herman Ramos, the clerk on duty, received a phone call from outside the hotel. "There's trouble in Room 100," the unidentified caller said. Ramos sent Charles, the bellhop who had replaced Kenny for the day shift, to check on Room 100. Moments later Sid Vicious called the front desk, saying "Someone is sick ... need help." Ramos called for an ambulance.
At 10:30 a.m., Vicious was seen in the hallway, heading toward his room. Fifteen minutes later the paramedics and police arrived. They found
Vera Mendelssohn came out of her room when she heard a commotion in the hallway. She saw Vicious surrounded by policemen. According to the Soho Daily News, she said, "His face looked battered." He was distraught and crying, moaning "Baby, baby, baby." When he noticed Mendelssohn, he said to her, "I killed her ...I can't live without her." Mendelssohn was so "stunned," she couldn't recall afterward if he'd said, "She fell on the knife," or "She must have fallen on the knife."
Vicious was taken to the Third Homicide Division on

The next day at his bail hearing, Vicious could barely stand. He was dressed entirely in black and wore black shoes without socks. The proceedings took 10 minutes, and bail was set at $50,000. He was then taken to the prison facility at Riker's



