Subscribe for FREE with:

Archive for the tag 'police activity'

Source: Jim.henderson via Wikimedia Commons

The two officers shot in the January 3 gun battle at the Fort Hamilton N train station are expected to survive. The suspect, however, was killed.

The plainclothes policemen were riding a Manhattan-bound N train that had pulled  into the Fort Hamilton stop when they noticed a walking man between the cars, according to DNA info. The officers approached the man and asked for his identification. He stood up, reached into his waistband and pulled a 9-millimeter Taurus gun on the cops. Then, he fired.

Officer Lukasz Kozicki, was hit in the legs and groin, and Officer Michael Levay, a Bensonhurst resident, took a hit in the back. Levay had on a bullet-proof vest.

Levay then returned the shot and killed the suspect. A straphanger in the same cart was injured when one of the bullets grazed his leg.

Witnesses on the scene said that everyone on the train was panicked. People ran from the subway platform and many fell as they scrambled to hide out.

The shootout in the subway car took place only an hour after Officer Juan Pichardo was shot in The Bronx. He is expected to live as well.

Senator Marty Golden responded to the incidents by focusing attention on re-establishing the death penalty. On his Facebook page he writes:

In the wake of the shooting of three New York City Police Officers this week, and the killing of a Nassau County police officer last fall, today I have renewed my call to reinstate the death penalty for criminals who kill police officers.

As a former New York City Police Officer, I know there is evil walking on the streets of the City and State of New York, endangering the lives of every single police officer. We only have to look at yesterday’s headlines for the latest tragic incidents. It is our responsibility to re-establish the death penalty. We can no longer sit back and watch ruthless murderers take the lives of police officers. New York needs the death penalty to protect our society and our police officers who risk their lives every day for our safety and well-being. We must not let danger rule our streets.

In 2004, the Court of Appeals overturned death penalty sentences, saying that judges were improperly required to instruct jurors in capital cases that if they deadlocked and failed to reach a verdict during the penalty phase of a trial, the judge would impose a sentence that would leave the defendant eligible for parole after 20 to 25 years.

The identity of the man who shot the officers on the train is being withheld until his family has been notified. Police did say that he has a lengthy rap sheet from New York and Los Angeles, which includes a bust for possession of a deadly weapon.

Source: Jim.henderson via Wikimedia Commons

Two transit officers were shot last night at 7:30 p.m. inside of the N subway station at 62nd Street and Fort Hamilton Parkway.

One officer was shot in the leg and the other was grazed by a bullet. It is not known how many shots were fired at the officers or why, according to NY1.

All N line southbound trains were suspended and the northbound trains ran on the D line.

There have been no reports on the condition of the officers who were taken to Lutheran Hospital and no further information on the suspect.

Click to enlarge

CompStat reports are produced by the New York Police Department on a weekly basis. We publish the week’s statistics for the 62nd Precinct reports every Friday. The 62nd Precinct is the police command responsible for Bensonhurst and Bath Beach.

Click to enlarge

CompStat reports are produced by the New York Police Department on a weekly basis. We publish the week’s statistics for the 62nd Precinct reports every Friday. The 62nd Precinct is the police command responsible for Bensonhurst and Bath Beach.

Click to enlarge

CompStat reports are produced by the New York Police Department on a weekly basis. We publish the week’s statistics for the 62nd Precinct reports every Friday. The 62nd Precinct is the police command responsible for Bensonhurst and Bath Beach.

Click to enlarge

CompStat reports are produced by the New York Police Department on a weekly basis. We publish the week’s statistics for the 62nd Precinct reports every Friday. The 62nd Precinct is the police command responsible for Bensonhurst and Bath Beach.

Source: Sidious1701 via Wikimedia Commons

From the office of Kings County District Attorney Charles Hynes:

Kings County District Attorney Charles J. Hynes today announced the indictment of Michael Volpe, 32, and his wife, Alisa Volpe, 25, for possessing weapons and drugs, and keeping an alligator in their West 6th Street home.  Michael Volpe was indicted on charges including three counts of Criminal Possession of a Weapon in the Third Degree. Michael and Alisa Volpe were both indicted on charges including three counts of Criminal Possession of a Weapon in the Fourth Degree, Possession of Ammunition, four counts of Criminal Possession of a Controlled Substance in the Seventh Degree, Overdriving, Torturing and Injuring Animals and Failure to Provide Proper Sustenance, Wild Animals Prohibited and Unlawful Possession of Marijuana. If convicted, Michael Volpe faces a maximum of seven years in prison and Alisa Volpe faces up to one year in jail.

On October 1, 2012, officers from the 66th precinct executed a search warrant at the home of Michael and Alisa Volpe, a one-bedroom basement apartment. The indictment charges that when the officers entered, they found metal knuckles, a fully-loaded revolver, and a loaded pistol. They also recovered a variety of prescription drugs including Alprazolam pills and Oxycodone pills. Marijuana was also found.  In addition, there was an alligator, which was approximately three feet long, in a tank in the living room, which was taken away by animal control. Under health code 161.01, most people cannot possess wild animals without special permit.

An indictment is an accusatory instrument and not proof of a defendant’s guilt.

The case is being prosecuted by Assistant District Attorney Lisa Marie Vellucci from the Trial Bureau Green Zone and supervised by Deputy District Attorney Dianne Malone, Chief of the Animal Cruelty Unit.

Click to enlarge

CompStat reports are produced by the New York Police Department on a weekly basis. We publish the week’s statistics for the 62nd Precinct reports every Friday. The 62nd Precinct is the police command responsible for Bensonhurst and Bath Beach.

Click to enlarge

CompStat reports are produced by the New York Police Department on a weekly basis. We publish the week’s statistics for the 62nd Precinct reports every Friday. The 62nd Precinct is the police command responsible for Bensonhurst and Bath Beach.

Click to enlarge

CompStat reports are produced by the New York Police Department on a weekly basis. We publish the week’s statistics for the 62nd Precinct reports every Friday. The 62nd Precinct is the police command responsible for Bensonhurst and Bath Beach.

Next »