Thread
:
At least 10 people shot outside Empire State Building
View Single Post
08-24-2012, 09:37 PM
#
6
everlastinge
Join Date
Oct 2005
Posts
406
Senior Member
New York Times
August 24, 2012
Eleven People Shot Outside Empire State Building
By JAMES BARRON, DAVID M. HALBFINGER and WILLIAM K. RASHBAUM
Slide Show
The scene of the shooting by the Empire State Building, on Fifth Avenue, between West 33rd and 34th Streets, on Friday. The body of the suspected shooter, who was identified as Jeffrey Johnson, 58, was inspected by emergency personnel.
A clothing designer who had been fired from a Midtown company shot and killed a former co-worker in the shadow of the Empire State Building on Friday morning and was then killed by the police, in a shootout in which nine bystanders were hurt, the authorities said.
Police Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly said that nine bystanders had been “wounded or grazed” and taken to hospitals. The mayor said that some of the injured may have been hit by police bullets during the confrontation with the suspect, whom Mr. Kelly identified as Jeffrey Johnson, 58, a former clothing designer at Hazan Imports. Mr. Kelly said that the two officers fired a total of 14 rounds and that he believed some of the shooting victims had been shot by the officers “based on the number of people shot and the capacity of” the gunman’s weapon.
The sudden spasm of violence shattered the routine bustle of the morning outside one of the world’s major tourist destinations and set off pandemonium at a busy intersection that was filled with pedestrians and cars. Visitors had begun crowding into the lobby of the building waiting to ascend to the observation deck on the 86th floor, which had already opened.
The former co-worker was identified by the police as Steve Ercolino.
A woman who worked with Mr. Ercolino and has a job in the same building as him said she was walking shoulder-to-shoulder with Mr. Ercolino when he got shot.
The co-worker, Irene Timan, 35, said they were just steps from the front door to their building on West 33rd Street when she saw Mr. Johnson lurking behind a white van parked at the curb.
“I saw him pull a gun out from his jacket, and I thought to myself, ‘Oh my God, he’s going to shoot him’ — and I wanted to turn and push Steve out of the way,” Ms. Timan said, in a telephone interview from the precinct house where she was being interviewed. “I knew it, I just knew it was going to happen. But it was too late. Steve screamed, Jeff shot him, and I just turned and ran.”
She said Mr. Johnson did not say anything before shooting Mr. Ercolino once in the chest. “He didn’t say one word,” Ms. Timan said. She said she learned later that he also shot Mr. Ercolino in the head.
Maureen Minuche, 45, said she was in a deli not far from the shooting scene buying breakfast when she heard people screaming. She said she pushed through a crowd of people standing around a body. “He was shot in the face, probably in the face, because he was disfigured,” she said.
Andrew Pellenberg, 23, and a friend, both from New Jersey, were also nearby, thinking about visiting the Empire State Building. “We heard 10 to 15 gunshots,” Mr. Pellenberg said, “and it was all in a 30-second span.”
Another witness, Rebecca Fox, said she was standing near the building when she saw crowds running away from the area. Then, she said, she saw a man “dead on the ground in front of the Empire State Building.” Officers had been alerted to the shooting by a construction worker who had followed Mr. Johnson from 10 West 33rd Street — where he shot Mr. Ercolino — around the corner and up Fifth Avenue, said Mr. Kelly, who joined the mayor at a briefing about two hours after the shooting.
Mr. Johnson, the commissioner said, was carrying a .45-caliber semiautomatic handgun “in a bag under his arm.” It had a capacity of eight bullets, officials said, adding that Mr. Johnson had fired three at Mr. Ercolino, who was apparently a vice president at Hazan Imports. Mr. Bloomberg said Mr. Johnson pulled out his gun “and tried to shoot the cops and kill the cops.”
“They returned fire,” the mayor added. A law enforcement official said later on Friday that Mr. Johnson did not fire his weapon.
Inside the emergency room at Bellevue Hospital Center, Terence Baksmaty, 29, said that his brother, Robert Asika, 23, was one of the shooting victims. Mr. Asika, his brother said, is a student at the Borough of Manhattan Community College but was in the area because he works selling tickets for Gray Line tours.
“I don’t feel too good,” Mr. Baksmaty said. “I just want to see him to make sure he is fine.” He said his mother was rushing to the hospital. “She is not doing great,” he said. “She is very sad and emotional.”
A spokeswoman for Bellevue said it had admitted six patients wounded in the shooting, three men and three women. The youngest was 20, said the spokeswoman, Ana Marengo, adding that the oldest was 43. All were in stable condition, she said, and none had sustained life-threatening injuries. Three other shooting victims were being treated at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center.
The Empire State Building remained closed throughout the day.
Mr. Kelly said Mr. Johnson appeared to have no criminal record. He said that Mr. Johnson had worked at Hazan Imports for six years. “During a downsizing at the company about a year ago,” Mr. Kelly said, “Johnson was laid off.” Mr. Kelly said that Mr. Johnson and Mr. Ercolino had filed harassment complaints against each other relating from a workplace dispute.
Mr. Johnson lived on the third floor of a six-story walk-up on East 82nd Street for about 18 months, said Guillermo Suarez, 72, the super of the building.
Every morning he had the same routine. He would leave the apartment between 7:30 and 8 a.m., say good morning and head to the McDonald’s on Third Avenue and 84th Street. After about 20 minutes, he would come back carrying a McDonald’s bag. He would nearly always wear the same thing — a tannish brown suit, sometimes with a tie. Then he would generally stay in the apartment the rest of the day.
He did the same thing on Friday morning, but this time he did not come back.
© 2012 The New York Times Company
Quote
everlastinge
View Public Profile
Find More Posts by everlastinge
All times are GMT +1. The time now is
08:54 PM
.