https://brooklyneagle.com/articles/2019/08/05/shooting-at-crown-heights-vigil-injures-four/
Shooting at Crown Heights vigil injures four
Police look for evidence at the scene of a shooting that injured four on Buffalo Avenue and Sterling Place early Aug. 5. Eagle photo by Noah Goldberg
This story was updated on Monday at 12:22 p.m. and will continue to be updated with more information.
An early-morning vigil in Crown Heights was violently interrupted Monday when a shooter opened fire, injuring four people, police said.
Mourners were gathered at a vigil around 1:50 a.m. near Buffalo Avenue and Sterling Place for a person who had died of natural causes when the gunshots began, cops said.
Two men and two women were shot, though all were in stable condition as of Monday morning, according to a police spokesperson. Two of the victims were shot in the leg. One man was shot in the chest, and a woman was shot in the back, according to cops.
Earlene Belgon was supposed to be at the vigil, which she said was for a man named "Louie," who died two or three days ago. Belgon, who knew the victims, said the point of the vigil was to "respect and be here for him and his family."
"And they came out and started shooting," Belgon said. "I'm upset. Upset."
Police, who said the shooting was "targeted" and "gang-related," taped off the street and were collecting evidence later Monday morning. They did not say who was targeted or what gangs were involved.
A poster from the vigil, surrounded by candles, photos and flowers, was still taped to the wall of the building outside which the shooting occurred.
The mass shooting, Brooklyn's second in nine days, happened just miles away from a Brownsville shooting on July 27 at an Old Timers Day party that killed one and injured 11 others.
The Crown Heights shooting was listed on the Gun Violence Archive's website Monday morning as the country's most recent mass shooting — a term that the data collection defines as a shooting where four or more are injured, excluding the shooter.
No one has been arrested in the Crown Heights or the Brownsville shootings.
"A candlelight vigil in Crown Heights ended in shots fired last night," Mayor Bill de Blasio tweeted. "The NYPD is searching for the person who committed this cowardly act. If you have any information, please contact them IMMEDIATELY."
De Blasio did not call the shooting in Brownsville last weekend a mass shooting for four days, originally saying that "phrase is usually reserved for a different type of situation."
The Crown Heights incident came at the tail-end of a weekend of back-to-back mass shootings in the country, with at least 20 dead in El Paso, Texas, and another nine killed just hours later in Dayton, Ohio.
3 comments:
jerry pdx
Calling black shootings "gang related" is a sneaky way to camouflage mass shootings by non whites. They've been doing this since forever in order to maintain the illusion it's overwhelmingly whiteys.
Double figures in deaths needed to get any attention nowadays.What was described is just normal ghetto noise.
When presented with this report,Lesta said,"NO BLACK CRIME ON MY NEWSCAST--DO YOU HEAR ME?"
"Yes Mr.Holt,"said the white intern,"but what about Chicago--those 7 shootings in the park?"
"GET WHITEY OUT OF HERE!!!"
--GRA
Mt. Sinai trauma center in Chicago turning away so many patients because of shootings. West Side dudes active. Gun and Knife Club type of activity.
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