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  • 7
    days
    ago

    Deadly Greenwich Village shooting possible 'hate crime,' police say

    WNBC

    Authorities are investigating the overnight shooting death of a 32-year-old man in New York's Greenwich Village as a hate crime after police said the gunman may have hurled anti-gay slurs.

    By Matthew DeLuca, Staff Writer, NBC News

     

    Authorities are investigating the overnight shooting death of a 32-year-old man in New York’s Greenwich Village as a hate crime after police said the shooter may have hurled anti-gay slurs.

    "This clearly looks to be a hate crime," NYPD Commissioner Ray Kelly told reporters on Saturday.

    While investigators continued to piece together the events leading up to the shooting, police identified the victim as Marc Carson of Manhattan.

    Carson was outside a 99 Cent Pizza on Sixth Avenue before midnight with a friend when they were approached by the suspect, the friend told police, according to NBC New York. After the suspect hurled anti-gay slurs, Carson responded and then walked away, the friend told police.


    The suspect approached Carson and the friend again on West 8th Street near Sixth Avenue, law enforcement officials said. The suspect then allegedly pulled out a .38-caliber revolver and shot Carson in the face.

    Carson suffered a single gunshot wound to the head, according to a police release. He was pronounced dead on arrival at Beth Israel Hospital.

    The suspect was later apprehended after trying to outrun an officer who tried to question him. Police say officers found a silver-colored revolver in the suspect's possession. The man was identified as Elliot Morales, 33, of Manhattan, NBCNewYork.com reported. Police said Morales had an arrest for attempted murder in 1998, NBCNewYork.com reported.

    The police are seeking to question two unidentified men who were said to have been with him earlier in the evening, law enforcement officials said.

    The suspect had a separate encounter at a West Village restaurant earlier in the evening, police say. A manager and bouncer at the restaurant said the suspect made anti-gay comments and threats, NBC New York reported.

    “I am horrified to learn that last night, a gay man was murdered in my district after being chased out of a Greenwich Village restaurant and assailed by homophobic slurs,” City Council Speaker Christine Quinn said in a statement on Saturday.

    “There was a time in New York City when hate crimes were a common occurrence,” the mayoral hopeful said. “We refuse to go back to that time. This kind of shocking and senseless violence, so deeply rooted in hate, has no place in a city whose greatest strength will always be its diversity."

    Sharon Stapel of the New York City Anti-Violence Project said in a statement she was “deeply disturbed” by the shooting.

    Police said that a gay couple was attacked in a separate incident on May 10 near Madison Square Garden and severely beaten. One of the victims later required eye surgery. Another gay couple was assaulted by a group of men only days before in the same midtown area of the city.

    "New York has seen a shocking increase in hate crime in recent weeks," Assembly Member Deborah Glick said. "We must stand together as one city and declare that New York is not open for bigotry."

    777 comments

    The crime wasn't hating someone. The crime was shooting someone.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: new-york, shooting, gay, greenwich-village, nypd, homosexual, hate-crime, ray-kelly, christine-quinn
  • 13
    Mar
    2013
    8:35am, EDT

    2nd night of protests over NYPD shooting of Brooklyn teen

    View more videos at: http://nbcnewyork.com.

    By Matthew DeLuca, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Protesters gathered in Brooklyn for the second night Tuesday to protest the Saturday shooting of a teen by New York City police officers.

    About 100 people gathered to march from the scene of the shooting to a police precinct in the East Flatbush neighborhood amid a heavy police presence.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    “People gotta say, we’ve had enough of going to bed and waking up to another police killing,” protester Juanita Young told NBC New York.

    Kimani Gray, 16, adjusted his waistband suspiciously and pulled a .38-caliber revolver before officers shot him shortly before 11:30 p.m. on Saturday, police told NBC New York. Police fired eleven shots and struck Gray multiple times. A revolver with four live rounds was found at the scene, according to police.

    More than 70 people marched to a police precinct on Monday to protest Gray’s shooting. The protesters threw garbage and empty bottles at the precinct, NBC New York reported. The precinct building was not damaged, but officials told the station that a 51-year-old man was injured and had his iPhone stolen when 50 people stormed a neighborhood Rite Aid.

    “They were throwing garbage in the street,” witness Winston James told NBC New York, “pelting the city buses, pulling down the fruit stand.”

    A 19-year-old was arrested for looting after Monday’s protest. There were no reported arrests after Tuesday’s demonstration.

    Outrage over Gray’s violent death has reached the city’s top cop.

    City Councilman Jumaane Williams, who represents the district where the shooting took place, clashed with police commissioner Ray Kelly on Tuesday, saying that Kelly does not spend enough time in his district.

    “I was there last night at 1 o’clock in the morning,” Kelly said.

    “Yes, but you didn’t walk around, I didn’t ask you to because there wasn’t the time to do it,” Williams said. “But I want to go when it is safer, when there are people we can talk to.”

    A family vigil for Gray was delayed by the protests but was scheduled to go ahead Wednesday.

    “We understand the frustration in the community, but we have a grieving mother who’s lost two sons in three years, and all she wants to do is bury her son,” said Gilford Monrose, a spokesman for the family.

    142 comments

    If the facts are correct in this story, this sounds like a justifiable response by the police. However, be sure that AL and Jesse will say otherwise. More protests to follow.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: new-york-city, nypd, brooklyn, ray-kelly
  • 28
    Dec
    2012
    2:16pm, EST

    New York City homicides, shootings at modern record lows

    Seth Wenig / AP

    New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, left, and Police Commissioner Ray Kelly speak to reporters after a Police Academy graduation ceremony Friday, Dec. 28, 2012, in New York.

    By M. Alex Johnson, NBC News

    Homicides and shootings in New York are at their lowest in a half-century, Mayor Michael Bloomberg said Friday.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Bloomberg and Police Commissioner Ray Kelly credited stepped-up policing for the 19.6 percent drop in homicides (from 515 last year to 414 through Friday) and the 15.9 percent decline in overall shootings (from 1,608 last year to 1,353).

    That's the fewest homicides since the city started keeping such statistics in 1963, and it's dramatically lower than the record high of 2,245 set in 1990.

    The most recent FBI figures show that homicides have been falling in most major cities in recent years, but the drop in New York far outpaces the national average decline of 4 percent from 2010 to 2011, the last full year for which federal figures are available.


    Kelly said officers had taken 8,000 weapons "out of the hands of people we stop, 800 of them illegal handguns," while Bloomberg singled out the city's participation in Operation Impact, a 2003 state initiative that pairs new police recruits with veteran officers in specific high-crime areas, as a particular success.

    "The fact that the safest big city in America is safer than ever is a testament to the hard work and determination of the men and women who put their lives on the line for us every day — and it also reflects our commitment to doing everything possible to stop gun violence," Bloomberg said in a statement.

    Watch US News crime videos on NBCNews.com

    Neither man specifically mentioned the city's controversial stop-and-frisk policy, which allows officers to search someone as he or she leaves a private building if they have a "reasonable suspicion" that the person is likely to commit a crime.

    The policy is under legal challenge from civil liberties groups, which contend that police use it as a pretext to stop and search anyone without cause and contend in court documents that three-quarters of all New Yorkers searched under it are African-American or Latino. A trial is set for March.

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    200 comments

    Gun control is working superbly and setting all time records for New York City. Imagine how much good it could do for the rest of this great nation.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: new-york, crime, homicides, michael-bloomberg, featured, ray-kelly
  • 28
    Jul
    2012
    10:11pm, EDT

    NYPD to unveil terrorist tracking system, Commissioner Kelly says

    By NBC News staff and wire services

    The New York Police Department will officially unveil its sophisticated surveillance system to track criminals and potential terrorists as soon as next week, Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly said Saturday.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Kelly said the city developed the software with Microsoft, The Associated Press reported.

    Kelly said the "domestic awareness system" combines citywide video surveillance with law enforcement databases.


    He said the tracking system will be officially unveiled by New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg as soon as next week. Kelly spoke Saturday before an audience at the Aspen Security Forum.

    Keith Bedford / Reuters file

    New York City Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly is shown at a July 20 news conference.

    NYPD officials in New York told NBC News Saturday evening they had no information about Kelly's comments.

    Watch US News crime videos on NBCNews.com 

    The NYPD has been under fire for surveillance of Muslim communities and partnering with the CIA to track potential terrorism suspects. Muslim groups have sued to shut down the NYPD programs.

    Kelly defended the policies as key to thwarting 14 terrorist plots against the city since the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.

    Stay informed with the latest headlines; sign up for our newsletter

    The NYPD has been reported to have been working on a domain awareness system for years. A 2009 NYPD counterterrorism document describing the system's use says:

    The Domain Awareness System is a counterterrorism tool designed to:

    • Facilitate the observation of pre-operational activity by terrorist organizations or their agents
    • Aid in the detection of preparations to conduct terrorist attacks
    • Deter terrorist attacks
    • Provide a degree of common domain awareness for all Stakeholders
    • Reduce incident response times
    • Create a common technological infrastructure to support the integration of new security technology.

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    81 comments

    It would seem George Orwell was off by less than 30 years. Truly amazing how quick some people are to give up their liberty.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: new-york, security, terrorists, nypd, ray-kelly
  • 23
    Mar
    2012
    10:06pm, EDT

    NYPD forces out cops in 2006 Sean Bell shooting

    By Jonathan Dienst and Shimon Prokupecz, NBCNewYork.com

    NEW YORK -- Three officers involved in the controversial Sean Bell shooting case will be forced out of the New York Police Department by Monday, including one who will be fired, NBC New York has learned.

    Dima Gavrysh / AP

    New York Police Detectives Marc Cooper, left, Gescard Isnora, center, and Michael Oliver talk to media at a news conference April 25, 2008, in New York after they were acquitted of all charges the 50-shot killing of an unarmed groom-to-be Sean Bell on his wedding day in November 2006.

    NYPD Commissioner Ray Kelly has upheld a departmental trial judge's ruling to fire Detective Gescard Isnora, sources said. Two other detectives - Michael Oliver and Marc Cooper - are expected to report to the NYPD's pension board Monday to formally hand in their papers, sources said.


    NYPD spokesman Paul Browne confirmed the decision by Commissioner Kelly to fire Detective Isnora saying,"There was nothing in the record to warrant overturning the decision of the Department's trial judge."

    See the original story an NBCNewYork.com

    One source said Isnora is not expected to be allowed to get a pension as a result of Kelly's ruling.

    The president of the Detective's Endowment Association declined comment.

    Isnora was the detective who fired first sparking the 2006 50-shot fusillade that killed Sean Bell and injured Joseph Guzman and Trent Benefield.

    Bell was killed in a Grey Nissan outside a Queens strip club hours before he was supposed to marry his longtime fiancée Nicole Paultry Bell.

    Detectives Oliver, Isnora and Cooper were indicted but all were found not guilty at trial in 2008.

    The city did agree to pay $7 million to Bell's family and his friends injured in the shooting.

    Isnora had fought to keep his job but Deputy Commissioner Martin Karopkin ruled after the departmental trial that he be fired. 

    A second officer, Michael Carey, was found not guilty.

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    5 comments

    You do realize that two of them are Black right, guess racism can't be used here.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: new-york, nypd, sean-bell, ray-kelly
  • 27
    Jan
    2012
    11:54am, EST

    Sources: Fox anchor's accuser had an abortion

    The son of New York City Police Commissioner Ray Kelly is fighting accusations that he sexually assaulted a woman, who later had an abortion.  WNBC-TV's Jonathan Dienst reports on the case against Greg Kelly.

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    NEW YORK -- A woman who has accused the son of New York City's police commissioner of sexually assaulting her told authorities she got pregnant from the encounter and had an abortion, people familiar with the investigation said.

    The woman told authorities she met Greg Kelly for drinks on Oct. 8, then went back to her law office in lower Manhattan, where she was assaulted, one person familiar with the case told The Associated Press. She told officials she was not capable of consenting to sex, the person said.


    Kelly, 43, was absent from his job as anchor of the popular local morning show "Good Day New York" on Fox 5 New York, WNYW, when news of the alleged attack broke Thursday morning. He has, through a lawyer, denied the allegations.

    According to The New York Daily News, Kelly and the accuser exchanged texts for a considerable period after the incident and he said he received "flirtatious" messages from the woman, an indication that their meetup was consensual and for a "sexual purposes," police sources said.

    The woman said she called Kelly some time after their encounter, furious, and asked him, "Why'd you do that?" the News reported.

    "That could be the big key," an investigator, who was not identified, told the News on Thursday. "Unless she taped the phone call, whether this guy gets charged could be determined by the texts."

    In addition, according to a law enforcement official quoted by the AP, the woman said she became pregnant and had an abortion. The official, who was not authorized to speak publicly, talked to the AP on condition of anonymity.

    It wasn't clear whether the woman supplied any medical evidence to authorities to support her claim.

    Police spoke to the woman but quickly turned the case over to the Manhattan district attorney's office because of the potential conflict of interest in investigating the son of Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly.

    NYPD commish's son, a Fox anchor, in rape probe

    The younger Kelly, a former Fox News correspondent, is cooperating with the investigation, his lawyer, Andrew Lankler, said in an emailed statement.

    Kelly "strenuously denies any wrongdoing of any kind," Lankler said. "We know that the district attorney's investigation will prove Mr. Kelly's innocence." The lawyer didn't respond to questions about the focus of the investigation.

    Lew Leone, the general manager of the New York Fox station, said, "Greg Kelly has requested some time off." He did not elaborate.

    Suspicions
    The story came to law enforcement's attention after the woman's boyfriend was told of the alleged incident and became enraged, the anonymous AP source said.

    The woman's boyfriend then confronted the elder Kelly at a recent public event, police spokesman Paul Browne said.

    "He said, 'Your son ruined my girlfriend's life,'" Browne said. "The commissioner said, 'Well, what do you mean?' He said he didn't want to talk about it here, so the commissioner told him to send a letter."

    Browne said that, to his knowledge, no letter was sent. He said he could not comment on the investigation because of the potential conflict of interest.

    According to her boyfriend, the woman has been "an emotional cripple" since the incident, ABCNews.com reported. 

    Charles Sykes / AP file

    Greg Kelly, seen in November 2010

    A source told WABC in New York that the boyfriend, who is significantly older, had had a vasectomy and when he learned his girlfriend was pregnant, he knew the child was not his. No other media outlets confirmed that, but others, including the New York Post, reported the woman told detectives she was not having sex with her boyfriend at the time.

    On Friday, skepticism was cast on the accuser's account.

    Investigators "don't buy her story," a source told the Post, adding that the three months that passed in between the alleged attack and the time it took to report it are adding to suspicion. 

    In addition to texts, the woman also allegedly exchanged emails with Kelly during the three months, local media reported.

    It's not known whether Kelly was informed of the alleged abortion.

    Mayor: NYPD 'did exactly what they should do'
    Mayor Michael Bloomberg Thursday that he "thought the police department did exactly what they should do" by turning the matter over to the district attorney.

    "Keep in mind: Everyone has a right to have their complaints investigated," the mayor said, noting that Greg Kelly hasn't been charged with any crime.

    It wasn't immediately clear how much time elapsed between the man's remarks to the commissioner and the woman's decision to go to a police station Tuesday, nor why she had waited for nearly three months after the alleged attack to make a report.

    It's also unclear how long the woman and Kelly knew each other before the alleged encounter at her office.

    The identity of the woman has not been released, and the AP -- along with msnbc.com and most major media outlets -- does not name people who report being sexually assaulted unless they agree to be identified or come forward publicly.

    The Daily News reported she was the 30-year-old daughter of a prominent lawyer who graduated from a prestigious private school in Manhattan, according to sources. She reportedly works as a paralegal at a firm near Wall Street.

    Kelly joined Fox News in 2002. He covered the Iraq War, including four assignments in Baghdad, and was the White House correspondent from 2005 to 2007, according to his biography on WNYW's website.

    In 2007, the television show "Extra" identified him as the most eligible anchorman on TV. The show's website said Kelly "has enough heart and courage to make any woman swoon." He is single.

    Kelly served for nearly a decade in the Marine Corps and is now a lieutenant colonel in its reserves.

    Raymond Kelly has been police commissioner since 2002. He also served as commissioner in the 1990s.

    The allegations about Kelly's son are the commissioner's latest potential public relations challenge. Also Thursday, about 20 activists held a news conference on the steps of City Hall and criticized Ray Kelly for giving an interview to the producers of the movie "The Third Jihad." They said the film encourages Americans to be suspicious of all Muslims. Kelly has apologized for the interview.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    89 comments

    She cheats on her boyfriend and gets pregnant which is how he finds out, so her only way to save face was to claim rape. Classic.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: nypd, rape-charges, raymond-kelly, ray-kelly, greg-kelly

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