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BOUNCER’S SLEW OF SLAY CLUES: DA

Alleged serial-killer bar bouncer Stephen Sakai fancied himself a coldblooded professional killer, but he left obvious clues and witnesses behind as he went on a three-month killing rampage in Brooklyn, prosecutors said yesterday as they opened their triple-murder case.

According to prosecutors, Sakai, 32, walked away from his crime scenes without even a thought.

There were the drops of his own blood on the bathroom sink after he allegedly stabbed 56-year-old Wayne Tyson inside his Eastern Parkway apartment in September 2005.

There was the spent shell casing on the floor of fellow bouncer Irving Matos’ East 31st Street apartment two months later.

And there was a second shell casing – fired from the same gun – beside the body of security-company manager Edwin Mojica in the hallway outside his Manhattan Avenue apartment.

But the most mind-boggling clue of all was human. According to prosecutors, Sakai shot Matos as another man, Daniel Fishback, and his girlfriend watched in horror.