03-11-13 Brooklyn- Riot Condition

truck4

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I/A/O 67th PCT (also quarters of E-248)

Originated at Norstrand Ave X Church Ave and moving on the 67th PCT

2040hrs- Large group in the intersection throwing bottles and rioting. Looting reported.

2055hrs- Mobilization at the 67th PCt, all officers to bring 'hats and bats.'

2110hrs- Large group of over (100) moving toward the PCT. Unconfirmed rpts that this is in relation to the shooting of an armed teen a few days ago.
 
So let me get this straight, if the 16yo A+ citizen would have shot the cop this wouldn't be going on right now? I hope the bats are swinging tonight.
 
I guess that they had to cancel choir practice in the local houses of worship.
 
'There?s a lot of anger here': Riot breaks out in Brooklyn following candlelight vigil for 16-year-old shot by cops
Memorial for Kimani 'Kiki' Gray, who was fatally wounded by police Saturday after allegedly pointing a gun in their direction, turned ugly as nearly 100 angry mourners clashed with cops, tossing bottles and creating a riot

The crowd was planning to march to the 67th Precinct stationhouse but police set up a blockade.
Anger over the death of a Brooklyn teenager shot and killed by police fueled a riot on the streets of East Flatbush Monday ? projectiles were hurled at cops, car windows were smashed and a pharmacy customer had a bottle bashed over his head.

The scenes of violence on blocks near the NYPD?s 67th Precinct stationhouse followed a protest march that grew out of a candlelight vigil for Kimani (Kiki) Gray, 16, killed by police bullets on Saturday.

In the aftermath of the riot, as police were trying to secure the area and assess damage to stores along streets strewn with broken glass, City Councilman Jumaane Williams called for Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly and Mayor Bloomberg to visit the community.

?There?s a lot of anger here,? said Williams, whose district includes the riot zone. ?This isn?t just from one particular shooting. A whole community has not been heard for far too long.?

Kelly visited the precinct stationhouse about 12:30 a.m. Tuesday ? more than four hours after the chaos began ? but did not speak to reporters.

The vigil for Kimani was held at E. 52nd St. and Tilden Ave., the location of the shooting, which has caused tensions to simmer in the community, in part because the boy?s family contests police allegations that he was armed with a handgun. Starting at about 8 p.m., nearly 100 people set off from the vigil site to march the more than 20 blocks to the precinct stationhouse, on Snyder Ave. near Nostrand Ave.

But the procession, peaceful at first, turned into a wild confrontation between furious marchers and cops after a faction broke off from the group and began to smash car and store windows with rocks and jump on the tops of vehicles, police sources and witnesses said.

?I was sitting in my living room,? said Mary John, 43, who witnessed destruction near E. 31st St. and Church Ave.

?People were standing up on vehicles. I saw them take garbage from the sidewalk and throw it onto the street. I saw someone take a TV and smash it into my neighbor?s car. They were throwing rocks at the cars.

?I said, ?Oh my god! What?s going on here??? she continued. ?They were calling out, ?Rest in peace, Kiki.? I was shocked.?

Abdoulaye Barry, 24, who works at African Movies, at Church Ave. and E. 31st St., described how rioters tried to storm the business. He said he was outside, saw rioters causing mayhem in the streets, and rushed back to urge his co-workers to lock the store?s gates. Rioters rushed the entrance, fighting with workers as they struggled to lock the roll-down gates, he said.

The workers succeeded ? barely. But they locked themselves into the store from the inside. Firefighters later had to cut the gates to liberate them.

Bottles, trash and projectiles were thrown at the officers.

?It was like the end of the world,? Barry told the Daily News. ?That?s the first time something like that had happened here.?

At a Rite Aid drug store on Church Ave. near Albany Ave., which had about 60 people inside at the time, at least one rioter physically assaulted a customer ? cracking him over the head with a glass bottle. He was rushed to Kings County Hospital and listed in stable condition later, a police spokeswoman said. A manager of the store was also assaulted; he refused medical attention, the spokeswoman said. There were unconfirmed reports the store was looted; the police spokeswoman said only that the cash registers were not robbed.

When cops finally managed to block the mob?s progress, about a block from the 67th Precinct stationhouse, rioters began pitching glass bottles at police officers as they moved in on the crowd, a police source said.

One person threw a garbage can at a cop, the source added.

?They?re acting rowdy and calling us racist,? said a police officer at the scene.

The FDNY were forced to saw frightened employees out of a store on Church Ave following the riot.

As rioters fled into the night and protestors began making their way back toward E. 52nd St., Williams joined the fray and tried to prevent more violence.

?The mayor and the [police] commissioner should be down here. Right now!? Williams, a critic of NYPD policy, said before Kelly appeared on the scene. ?There?s a feeling that they don?t really care. They are leading and policing for one portion of this city. But they?re not paying attention to the other parts; they?re not listening to them.?

Public Advocate Bill de Blasio, a Democratic candidate for mayor this year, also came to the area Monday night.

?I understand if young people are frustrated, but we have to help them understand the way to deal with it should be a peaceful way,? he said. ?They have every right to protest ? that?s the American way.?

Williams said he was not surprised by the riot, only that it hadn?t happened before. Critics of the NYPD?s controversial stop-and-frisk policy argued it leads to distrust of the police by the black community because its members are stopped in such high numbers.

?When something happens, we should be able to trust the police and what they say,? Williams said. ?Police officers shooting black men, black men shooting black men, it?s a problem that needs to be dealt with. If they want to ignore it, it?s just going to

Over 100 angry mourners took to the streets following the memorial for Kimani 'Kiki' Gray.

Following the shooting death of Kimani on Saturday, police officials said he flashed a gun at a pair of plainclothes cops who approached a stoop where he and others were hanging out. Police said a loaded .38-caliber revolver was recovered at the scene ? but family of the slain teen, who was hit multiple times by police bullets, vehemently deny that he was carrying a weapon.

Before the riot Monday, a police source told The News that investigators believe Kimani was a member of the Bloods street gang. The source pointed to two YouTube videos, published last year, that featured violence between Bloods and Crips. The source said Kimani appears in both videos, which The News has refrained from publishing due to graphic content.

In one video, Kimani is clad in a red Adidas hoodie and goes by the nickname ?Shapow,? the source said. He can be seen taunting and hitting a 13-year-old rival on Nostrand Ave. near Glenwood Rd. in Flatbush after the adversary flashed gang signs and said he runs with the Crips.

Kimani also swiped a beaded necklace from the Crip and then stomped on it, the video shows, while his friends in the background identified themselves as Bloods.

The second video captured an apparent Crips retaliation following the smackdown. A group of self-identified Crips stormed a McDonald?s on Utica Ave. and Ave. H in Flatbush after they spotted Kimani and other alleged Bloods inside, according to the video.

After a minute of heckling and heated exchanges inside the McDonald?s, the Crips retreated outside. They mocked Kimani for refusing to come out into the parking lot.


 
At it again 3/13/13

Brooklyn, NY *Large Crowd/Protest* Utica ave - Church Ave, NYPD reporting a large crowd throwing rocks and bricks. Protest in regards to the shooting of an armed teenager last weekend.

Brooklyn, NY *Injured MOS* 48 and Church Requesting a bus for MOS hit by something thrown from the crowd

http://www.ustream.tv/stopmotionsolo
 
Blame Kimani Gray
By BOB McMANUS

A 16-year-old aspiring sociopath pulls a gun, aims it at cops and is shot to death in
response.

Actions have consequences.

Then his friends, to mark his passing, go on to trash the neighborhood ? looting a
pharmacy and beating at least two innocent people in the process.

You?d almost think it was Chicago. But no, it was East Flatbush, Brooklyn. And who
was to blame for all the mayhem? Why, Police Commissioner Ray Kelly, of course.
Silly even to ask.

At least that?s Brooklyn City Councilman Jumaane Wlliams? take, as expressed
during a budget hearing Tuesday at City Hall.

Williams very precisely drilled into Kelly, taking great care to avoid specific
accusations, but also leaving no doubt that he holds the commissioner
fundamentally responsible for everything. Not the kid with the gun, not the culture
that led to the initial confrontation and certainly not the punks who ran riot in its
aftermath.

And, no doubt, Williams will explain in great detail today just how it was that Kelly &
Co. instigated last night?s rolling anti-cop temper-tantrum along Brooklyn?s Church
Avenue. It should be a tiresome tale.  (How true)

Certainly he was in full throat Tuesday: ??t was more than just one incident? he
barked at Kelly ? which, from the councilman?s point of view, no doubt seems true.
From the perspective of the two cops suddenly staring down the barrel of a .38-
caliber revolver, however, it very much was one incident ? with life-and-death
implications. And that?s how it turned out: two cops alive; one youthful, but lethally
armed, criminal dead.

Better that nobody had died, of course. Even better if 16-year-old Kimani Gray ?
an apparent gang member with a hefty criminal record ? had left his gun at home
Saturday night. Or, at the very least, that he?d tossed it in a gutter instead of
pointing it at police officers.

Certainly this adds up to a profound personal tragedy ? for the kid, obviously; for
his family, and certainly for the cops, who must live with the outcome for the rest of
their lives.

But as a matter of public policy, the shooting was a textbook vindication of the
Bloomberg administration?s aggressive stop-and-frisk anti-illegal-gun practices.
The tactic is every liberal?s bugbear these days ? Jumaane Williams most of all.
It?s premised on the perfectly reasonable assumption that experienced street cops
develop a sixth sense about who?s carrying and who isn?t. Arrest enough of the
former, and soon you?ll have a lot more of the latter.
It?s not flawless, by any means. The majority of those stopped turn out to be clean
as a whistle.

But then there are the Kimani Grays of the world, who can be lethal beyond
imagination ? and they trump.

Indeed, the reality of contemporary urban crime speaks to the program?s efficacy ?
as even a casual glance at the bloody, stop-and-friskless cities of Chicago,
Philadelphia, Baltimore and Detroit will illustrate.

As Kelly put it last fall: ?If we had Chicago?s murder rate, [New York?s homicide]
total would be 1,224. If we had Philadelphia?s, 1,483; at Baltimore?s rate, 2,338 ?
and at Detroit?s, 3,635.?

In the event, New York finished the year with 419.

That?s not good enough for Williams, who?s been chewing on Kelly?s leg over stopand-frisk for years.
Sad to say, he?s not alone. All of the Democratic mayoral candidates ? while
walking various rhetorical tightropes ? have made it clear that when Mike
Bloomberg exits, stop-and-frisk as an effective anti-gun policy won?t linger either.

Clearly, Kimani Gray was oblivious, but thousands of others understand ? many
from bitter experience ? that going out with a gun can bring down upon them a
world of hurt. So far fewer of them do it here than elsewhere. Thanks, essentially, to stop-and-frisk.

This won?t last if policy changes effected by a new mayor, or edicts imposed by the
federal courts, make packing a gun as intrinsically risk-free here as it is in Chicago
and Detroit.

Those are the stakes ? Jumaane Williams? contrary views notwithstanding.
rmcmanus8@gmail.com

Officer smashed in the face with a
brick, 50 arrested in Brooklyn
protest

By DANA SAUCHELLI and JAMIE SCHRAM

A police officer was smashed in the face with a brick and 50 people were arrested
as unrest over a teenager shot dead by cops continued to plague a Brooklyn
neighborhood last night.

For the second time this week, swarms of youths roamed the streets of East
Flatbush armed with bottles and bricks. One of those arrested was the sister of 16-
year-old Kimani Gray, who police said pointed a loaded pistol at two officers before
they gunned him down Saturday.

Mahnefah Gray and most of the others were charged with disorderly conduct.
Robert Mecea Mahnefah Gray, the sister of Kimani Gray, was among those
arrested during Wednesday's protest.

?I was standing at the corner, on the sidewalk, and the cop said, ?You can?t stand
there.? said Tyreck Strachan, 13, after being released from the 67th Precinct station
house.

?I said, ?I?m on the sidewalk.? He started hitting me with a stick.?

Tension mounted after a planned 7 p.m. vigil for Gray. The teen?s parents did not
show up as expected, and within a few hours, as many as 200 furious protesters
started roaming the neighborhood, as they did Monday night.

They marched down Church Ave. toward the station house, where they splintered
off and ran amok. The officer who was hit was not seriously injured.

www.nypost.com/f/print/news/local/brooklyn/officer_smashed_protest_the_face_CKU7bdPOuXzUtQoYP9CWOM#axzz2NW3dJc4v

Last night?s trouble came after officials revealed yesterday that Kimani, a reputed
Bloods gang member, had been hit with seven bullets.

An autopsy showed he had been shot in the front and back ? indicating that he
was facing officers when the shooting began, a law-enforcement source said.

?He was facing them when he pointed the gun,? the police source said.
 
I am sorry for sounding a bit hard assed, but if you carry a gun, you carry responsibility and resulting consequences. If you point that weapon at anyone you must accept the results of such action. If you are pointing that weapon at a police office expect the worse! Why does a 16 year old have a handgun?
 
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

TUESDAY, MARCH 19, 2013

The New York City Sergeants Benevolent Association (SBA) offers a $5,000 reward for the arrest and conviction of person(s) responsible for producing a Wanted Poster of sergeant and police officer involved in the controversial shooting of Kimani ?Kiki? Gray

New York, March 19, 2013 - Ed Mullins, the President of the New York City Sergeants Benevolent Association (SBA), whose 12,000 members make it the fifth largest police union in the country, has announced a $5,000 reward for the arrest and conviction of the person(s) responsible for creating and distributing a Wanted Poster of an NYPD sergeant and police officer involved in the shooting of Kimani ?Kiki? Gray.

The officers fatally shot the 16-year-old Gray after he pointed a loaded .38 caliber revolver at them in Brooklyn on the evening of March 9. The gun was recovered at the scene, and scores of witnesses have stated that the officers gave Gray multiple orders to drop the weapon before firing.

The Wanted Poster was placed on several social media and networking sites and featured photos of the sergeant and police officer above the caption ?50z want these pigs heads.? It is believed that 50z is the name of a gang.

Under another subset the poster encourages any potential killers to ?empty the clip on umm.? The poster was also displayed in the March 18 edition of the New York Post.

?Anytime someone loses their life it is a tragic circumstance, but the distribution of this Wanted Poster is especially disturbing,? said Mullins. ?It is calling for the murder of two dedicated police officers who encountered an armed known gang member who ignored several orders to drop his weapon. The Wanted Poster puts the lives of all police officers, as well as innocent members of the public, in great danger and we are determined to see that the person or persons responsible for it are apprehended and prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.?

CONTACT: Robert Mladinich, SBA Communications Director, phone 212-343-5674 or 917-204-5916 (cell); E-mail: rmladinich@sbanyc.org.

Visit Sergeants Benevolent Association at: http://members.sbanyc.org/?xg_source=msg_mes_network
 
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