Commissioner

Community Organizes March as NYPD Seeks 2 Shooters in Brooklyn Block Party Shooting

No arrests have been made, and authorities asked anyone with information or cellphone video to come forward. One gun was recovered

What to Know

  • Police are looking for two suspects after 12 people were shot, one fatally, near the Brownsville Playground in Brooklyn Saturday night
  • A 38-year-old man died from a bullet wound to the head. His name was not immediately released
  • No arrests have been made, and authorities asked anyone with information or cellphone video to come forward

Hundreds of people turned out for a march in Brooklyn Monday evening as police search for two shooters who left one man dead and 11 injured after opening fire at a community festival.

Local leaders and various groups were joined by around 200 people Monday at the rally near the scene where gunfire erupted to stand united against violence in their Brownsville neighborhood.

The event comes nearly 48 hours after the Saturday night shooting as the annual Old Timers Event was coming to an end. The popular event features musical performances from former residents and current local talent.

Among the issues raised at the event was why city leaders and media are not calling what happened a "mass shooting," as compared to the California gunfire which was immediately labeled a mass shooting.

New York Police Commissioner James O'Neill said the shooting late Saturday in Brownsville "was a tragic end to a wonderful weekend" that involved thousands of people gathering to take part in the annual event.

The crowd at the celebration was dispersing when gunshots rang out from a playground area in the park where it was taking place, officials said.

Twelve people were hit — seven men and five women between the ages of 21 and 55. A 38-year-old man, Jason Pagan, died from a bullet wound to the head. His name was not immediately released.

Six of the wounded had been released from the hospital by midday Sunday, O'Neill said.

No arrests have been made, and authorities asked anyone with information or cellphone video to come forward. One gun was recovered. 

The police department is investigating to see if the shooting may have been gang related, as several of the victims had gang histories, according to NYPD Chief of Detectives Dermot Shea, including the man who was killed, who had ties to the Bloods gang. "Whether or not that played any role" hasn't been determing, said Shea.

O'Neill said police are looking into the gang possibility in part because gang violence accounts for about half of the shootings that take place in the area.

"There were a lot of people just chilling and having a good time," Kaseem Collins, 19, told the Daily News. Then, when shots rang out, "we all started running," he said. "I ran as fast as I could away from everyone. I thought I was going to get shot."

"I heard shots, and I saw a stampede running toward me," Diamond Perez, 38, told the newspaper.

The Old Timers Event had been held since 1963, O'Neill said.

A 2010 newsletter from the parks department described it as a celebration of former members of the Brownsville Recreation Center "who went on to success and fame in sports and other endeavors." It said the event has grown over the years to include concerts and other things.

Speaking at a news conference on Sunday, New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio said the two-day block party was an "example of everything good about the Brownsville community" and decried the shooting as a "tragedy" that does not define the neighborhood.

Videos posted on social media showed police clearing large groups of people out of the area around the recreation center. Photos from local news outlets showed several people taken away on stretchers, including some with what appeared to be minor wounds.

"It was chaos," Gary Miller, a 60-year-old vendor at the event, told the New York Post. Witnesses heard 9 to 11 shots, "and everyone was running and scattering for cover."

Brownsville is an east Brooklyn neighborhood that's continued to struggle with gun violence, even as New York streets become safer than they have been in decades.

State Sen. Roxanne J. Persaud added the hashtags "#StopTheViolence" and "#PutDownTheGuns" to her tweets expressing frustration with the shooting, which she called "unacceptable" and "cowardly."

"Our community mourns again. We should be able to have fun in open spaces without fear of violence," tweeted Persaud, whose district includes Brownsville. "Respect your community. We are better than the violence."

Activists and elected officials spoke out on the need for more resources to go toward community groups and anti-violence programs, as well as efforts to crack down on illegal guns. A group of community leaders said a march is planned for Monday night, with the goal being to underscore that violence in the neighborhood shouldn't be accepted as normal.

"We don't need bumper-sticker slogans, we need real partnership on the ground," Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams said.

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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