Tag Archives: nypd officers shot

2nd NYPD officer, Wilbert Mora, dies from injuries in Harlem shooting

NEW YORK CITY (WABC) — NYPD officer Wilbert Mora, who was shot and his partner killed while responding to a domestic call in Harlem, has died from his injuries, NYPD Commissioner Keechant Sewell announced Tuesday.

“It’s with great sadness I announce the passing of Police Officer Wilbert Mora,” she said. “Wilbert is 3 times a hero. For choosing a life of service. For sacrificing his life to protect others. For giving life even in death through organ donation. Our heads are bowed & our hearts are heavy.”

The 27-year-old officer, a four-year veteran of the NYPD, was shot in the head Friday night in Harlem.

“Wilbert Mora was a hero,” Mayor Eric Adams said. “He served his city, protected his community and gave his life for our safety. Our hearts are heavy. Our city is in mourning. To his family, loved ones, and brothers and sisters in the NYPD: Your city is standing with you today and always.”

Mora’s partner, rookie Officer Jason Rivera, 22, was also killed.

“True heroes never die,” PBA President Patrick Lynch said. “Our brother Police Officer Wilbert Mora has left us, but he will live on in the heart of every New York City police officer from this day forward. We are called upon to put ourselves between evil and the good people of this city. Police Officer Mora showed us what it means to carry out our mission with courage, skill and humanity. His sacrifice will guide us as we continue that mission, but we cannot succeed alone. We ask you once again to join us. Help us mourn our fallen heroes, and help us carry on in their name.”

WATCH | Pat Lynch: This is a ‘turning point’ in police-community relations

Officers lined the streets outside NYU Langone Tuesday evening ahead of a procession for Mora.

Rivera was the first to encounter the shooter in a back bedroom after his mother called 911 saying he was being problematic.

Funeral plans have now been finalized for Rivera, who will be laid to rest later this week.

Services for Rivera will be held at St. Patrick’s Cathedral with a wake on Thursday from 1-8 p.m. and a funeral on Friday at 9 a.m.

As for Mora, a viewing service is scheduled to be held at St. Patrick’s on Tuesday, February 1, from 1-8 p.m. followed by a funeral on Wednesday at 10 a.m.

“I join all of New York today in mourning the heartbreaking death of Officer Wilbert Mora,” Attorney General Letitia James said. “He was a hero until the end. Officer Mora and his partner, Officer Jason Rivera, showed courage in the face of imminent danger to protect New Yorkers. Their bravery exemplified their commitment to protecting the city they loved. Both will forever be remembered as heroes who dedicated their lives to making New York safer and stronger. I pray for strength and ease for their families and loved ones.”

ALSO READ | Mayor Adams says all city agencies will join fight against gun violence in NYC

In a final act of heroism, Mora fulfilled his wishes of being an organ donor.

“When Officer Wilbert Mora’s family was notified of his passing, his family knew their brave and dedicated son would want to continue to save lives, even in death,” LiveOnNY President and CEO Leonard Achan said. “Officer Mora’s final gift was the gift of life to others in need. He was transferred from Harlem Hospital to NYU Langone Health, where we have honored the family’s wishes for him to be an organ donor hero, so that he may ‘Live On’ while saving the lives of others. We extend our deepest condolences to the families, and friends of both officers, and our thoughts and prayers remain with them at this difficult time.”

Those who knew him were in mourning.

“He was just such a warm, gentle, giving young man,” John Jay College of Criminal Justice professor Gregory Sheppard said. “It’s tragic.”

The news was crushing for Sheppard, who taught Mora in his music theory class.

“I said, ‘Well why do you want to be a police officer?'” Sheppard said. “He said, ‘Professor, I really want to help people. I really want to help people.'”

Sheppard says Mora enjoyed the music class so much he joined the choir, and he remembers one particularly special moment that he re-watched on video when he heard Mora had been shot.

“We were singing a song called ‘Total Praise,’ and there was a line of text that said, ‘You are the source of my strength, you are the strength of my life,” he said. “And while he was singing that, one of the singers from the row in front of him turned around and looked at him, and he beamed a huge smile. So I hope that peace and comfort that he found in that song is comforting him now.”

President Joe Biden released a statement on his death:

“I’m deeply saddened by the loss of NYPD Officer Wilbert Mora as a result of last Friday’s senseless shooting. Today is a sad reminder of the risks the men and women of law enforcement face to protect us, and of the work we all must do to end the scourge of gun violence.”

Mayor Adams has ordered all flags on all city buildings, as well as stationary flagstaffs throughout the five boroughs, to continue to be flown at half-staff as a mark of respect for fallen NYPD Officer Wilbert Mora.

ALSO READ | How to help families of NYPD officers slain in line of duty

———-
* Get Eyewitness News Delivered
* More Manhattan news
* Send us a news tip
* Download the abc7NY app for breaking news alerts
* Follow us on YouTube
Submit a News Tip

Copyright © 2022 WABC-TV. All Rights Reserved.



Read original article here

Police shooting: New York City to honor NYPD officer killed in Harlem shooting with funeral service

HARLEM, Manhattan (WABC) — A city reeling from a recent spate of violence prepared to lay to rest a rookie police officer being hailed as an inspiration to his immigrant community, as investigators sought to make sense of a domestic dispute that left another officer “fighting for his life.”

Funeral services for New York City Police Officer Jason Rivera were being finalized, as his comrades in blue mourned the loss of the 22-year-old who joined the force to make a difference in what he had described as a “chaotic city.”

A solemn scene unfolded Sunday with a column of uniformed police officers, as well as a line of firefighters, flanking the streets as a hearse carrying the fallen officer left the medical examiner’s office.

Burial rites were scheduled for Friday, city officials said, while services were to be held Thursday at St. Patrick’s Cathedral.

Rivera and Officer Wilbert Mora were shot Friday night while answering a call about an argument between a woman and her adult son. Mora, 27, suffered a serious head wound, police said.

The medical examiner ruled Rivera’s death a homicide after an autopsy found he died from gunshot wounds to the head and torso.

Mora, who has been with the NYPD for four years, remained in life-threatening condition, Adams said Sunday.

Police say Mora will be transferred from Harlem Hospital to NYU Langone Medical Center.

On Saturday night, Mayor Eric Adams and community leaders gathered outside the 32nd precinct in Harlem for a candlelight vigil for the officers and unleashed an emotional plea to end the gun violence plaguing the city.

“We are going to unite around this issue and we know — some would say 95% of the city is good I say 99% of the city is good,” Adams said. “Let’s weed out that 1%. This is a fight — violence against New Yorkers, that’s the battle we’re in right now. We’re in a battle with a small number of people that believe they will hold our city hostage with violence. That will not happen.”

Details about what led to the deadly confrontation were still emerging.

Officials said a woman who made an emergency call Friday said she was ill and that her son who had come up to take care of her had become “problematic.” Adams said the woman did not specify the problem.

Authorities said three officers went to the apartment after the call came in. The officers spoke with the woman and another son, but there was no mention of a weapon, police said.

When the officers went to a rear room to talk to the man, shots suddenly rang out, striking them both.

Rivera was the first officer in the hallway and was struck first. He fell onto his back. Mora tried to duck into the kitchen during the shooting.

The 47-year-old suspect, believed to be the son, was then shot by another officer, a rookie, who stayed with the mother in the front of the apartment. The officer struck the suspect in the neck and shoulder.

The suspect was later identified as Lashawn McNeil and was said to be in critical condition.

The officers were taken to Harlem Hospital in police cruisers.

Rivera, who was described by the NYPD as a son, husband, and friend, died.

“I am struggling to find the words to express what we are enduring, we’re mourning and we’re angry,” said NYPD Police Commissioner Keechant Sewell. “The pain their families are experiencing is not something anyone can put into words. The three officers who arrived at that scene were doing their jobs.”

WATCH | Commissioner Sewell: ‘Our department is hurting, our city is hurting’

“It is our city against the killers, this was just not an attack on three brave officers, this was an attack on the city of New York – it is an attack on the children and families of this city,” Adams said.

Rivera was a rookie and joined the department in 2020 while Mora joined in 2018.

Officers had previously responded to the apartment for a domestic violence call in August.

McNeil has one prior arrest in New York City for narcotics in 2003 and four arrests outside of NYC, including unlawful possession of a weapon and assaulting a police officer.

WATCH | Witnesses describe deadly police shooting in Harlem

He is believed to have had behavioral problems and posted anti-government and anti-police material on social media.

McNeil was staying with his mother to help her take care of her other son who possibly has a learning disability.

When McNeil came up from Maryland in November, his mother – knowing of his history with guns – ordered him not to bring guns into the house. She later told police she didn’t know he had the weapon.

Police said the weapon used to shoot the officers, a Glock 45, was stolen from Baltimore in 2017.

A licensed security guard said it was taken by her 13-year-old son, who sold it for money. He was later arrested for the theft, but the gun was never recovered.

On Saturday morning, Adams had all flags lowered to half staff out of respect for Rivera.

Adams later visited the 32nd precinct, where Rivera was stationed, and where memorial bunting was hung outside.

During an address in Buffalo Saturday, New York Gov. Kathy Hochul echoed a call from Adams for Washington to act on gun violence.

President Joe Biden posted on Twitter that he and First Lady, Jill Biden, were ‘saddened’ to hear about the shooting.

The Associated Press contributed to this story

———-
* Get Eyewitness News Delivered
* More Manhattan news
* Send us a news tip
* Download the abc7NY app for breaking news alerts
* Follow us on YouTube
Submit a News Tip

Copyright © 2022 WABC-TV. All Rights Reserved.



Read original article here

Police shooting: NYPD officers identified after 1 killed, another critically injured in shooting after domestic call in Harlem

HARLEM, Manhattan (WABC) — Two NYPD officers who were shot when they responded to a domestic dispute were identified overnight.

The NYPD said 22-year-old Jason Rivera died while 27-year-old Wilbert Mora is in critical condition at Harlem Hospital.

This is a breaking news update, previous story below.

Two police officers responding to a domestic violence call of a mother and son fighting were shot, one fatally, in a first floor Harlem apartment.

The mother called police for help and met them in the front of the apartment at 119 West 135 Street at around 6:30 p.m.

When they went to a rear room to talk to the man, shots suddenly rang out, striking them both.

The 47-year-old suspect, believed to be the son, was then shot by another officer. He was later identified as Lashawn McNeil and was said to be in critical condition.

The officers were taken to Harlem Hospital in police cruisers. A 22-year-old officer was pronounced dead and the other is in surgery.

“I am struggling to find the words to express what we are enduring, we’re mourning and we’re angry,” said NYPD Police Commissioner Keechant Sewell. “The pain their families are experiencing is not something anyone can put into words. The three officers who arrived at that scene were doing their jobs.”

WATCH | Commissioner Sewell: ‘Our department is hurting, our city is hurting’

“It is our city against the killers, this was just not an attack on three brave officers, this was an attack on the city of New York – it is an attack on the children and families of this city,” Mayor Eric Adams said.

One of the officers is a rookie and joined the department in 2020. The other joined in 2018.

Officers had previously responded to the apartment for a domestic violence call in August.

McNeil has one prior arrest in New York City for narcotics in 2003 and four arrests outside of NYC, including unlawful possession of a weapon and assaulting a police officer.

During an emotional press briefing, Adams spoke directly to the officers of the NYPD as they mourn one of their own.

“I have to ask you, no matter how painful this moment is, please do not give up on the people in this city,” Adams said.

WATCH | Mayor Eric Adams on police shooting: An attack on NYC

Police said the weapon used to shoot the officers was stolen from Baltimore in 2017.

Adams and PBA President Patrick Lynch made passionate pleas on the importance of getting guns off the streets.

“Stop babies from being shot, stop the violence, the guns coming in — help us take them off the belt so they’re never shot again,” Lynch said.

WATCH | PBA President Pat Lynch: It’s time the city cries with us

Gov. Kathy Hochul released the following statement on Twitter, offering her condolences to the officer’s family:

“I am horrified by tonight’s tragedy in Harlem. My thoughts are with the family who answered the phone to receive the news they’ve always dreaded: that their loved one, who had sworn to protect and serve New Yorkers by joining @NYPDnews will not be coming home. I am praying for the recovery of his partner, the officer who is fighting for his life, and for his family. I know that all of New York is standing with these officers and their families. We must urgently confront the plague of gun violence in our state. Too many lives are being lost, and too many New Yorkers are living in fear. This is a crisis. That’s why earlier today, I extended an Executive Order declaring a gun violence State of Emergency. In the Executive Budget I released earlier this week, I put forward a plan to triple resources for our gun interdiction efforts, to stop the flow of illegal guns into our state, and also triple resources for violence interrupter programs to address the root causes of violence. I refuse to allow our cities to be gripped with fear. New Yorkers deserve action from their elected officials – and they will get it. I’ve pledged my full support to @NYCMayor and look forward to working with him and other leaders to continue to take meaningful actions to make New Yorkers safer.”

WATCH | Witnesses describe deadly police shooting in Harlem

There have been a total of four police officers and three suspects shot within the last 72 hours.

One officer was shot in the Bronx and one in Staten Island. Both of those earlier shootings were non-life-threatening.

WATCH | 5 NYPD officers have been shot since the start of 2022

———-
* Get Eyewitness News Delivered
* More Manhattan news
* Send us a news tip
* Download the abc7NY app for breaking news alerts
* Follow us on YouTube
Submit a News Tip

Copyright © 2022 WABC-TV. All Rights Reserved.



Read original article here

NYC police shooting: Video shows 2 NYPD cops shot by suspect during struggle in Belmont, Bronx

BELMONT, Bronx (WABC) — One of two NYPD officers shot and wounded by a suspect in the Bronx Wednesday night was released from the hospital just before noon Thanksgiving Day.

There was a sense of gratitude that everyone involved in the wild shooting survived — but also a sense that something has to change.

Fellow officers lined up to greet NYPD Officer Alejandra Jacobs, who suffered two gunshot wounds to her arm.

The other officer, Jacobs’ partner and an eight-year veteran, remains hospitalized and is expected to survive, as is the 23-year-old suspect.

The incident happened on East 187th Street and Beaumont Avenue in the Belmont section around 8:15 p.m. Wednesday.

Video obtained by Eyewitness News shows the officers barely had the chance to speak to him before he opened fire.

According to NYPD Commissioner Dermot Shea, police received a 911 call about a man with a gun at the location.

Two officers responded, and surveillance video shows what happened when they arrived.

The officers confront the suspect, whom they recognized from the description they were given. The suspect reached for a gun and a struggle ensued, during which the suspect fired at the officers.

The female officer returned the gunfire, firing five times, and the suspect was shot three times. All three were taken to St. Barnabas Hospital.

‘We have lot to be thankful for,” the commissioner added, citing no loss of life in the incident.

Police recovered the suspect’s gun at the scene. He’s identified as Charlie Vasquez of Greenpoint, Brooklyn. He has several prior arrests including for weapons possession.

They said the gun was reported stolen from Georgia.

“It comes down to accountability, you should not feel comfortable carrying an illegal firearm,” NYPD Chief of Department Rodney Harrison said. “And that’s what it comes down to. In New York, we have some of the strictest gun laws in the country, but we’ve got to make sure those who choose to carry these illegal firearms are held accountable for what they are doing.”

RELATED | Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade: Street closures, balloon inflation, performers and more

———-
* More Bronx news
* Send us a news tip
* Download the abc7NY app for breaking news alerts
* Follow us on YouTube
Submit a News Tip

Copyright © 2021 WABC-TV. All Rights Reserved.



Read original article here