Saturday, December 20, 2014

'Assassinated': Two NYPD Officers Killed While Sitting in Patrol Car
Two NYPD officers were killed in Brooklyn.
BY PHIL HELSEL
Nbcnews.com
NIGHTLY NEWS

Two New York City Police Department officers were fatally shot in cold blood as they sat in their police car in Brooklyn Saturday afternoon, in an attack the police commissioner and the mayor branded "an assassination."

"Today two officers were shot and killed. With no warning, no provocation, they were, quite simply, assassinated," Bratton said. "Targeted for their uniform and for the responsibility they embraced to keep the people of this city safe."

The officers were shot by a gunman who "took a shooting stance" outside their car in the Bedford-Stuyvesant section of Brooklyn and fired through the passenger side window at 2:47 p.m., Police Commissioner William Bratton said at a news conference. The attack was so sudden that officers, Wenjian Liu and Rafael Ramos, may not have even known what was occurring, Bratton said.

The gunman, identified as Ismaaiyl Brinsley, ran into a subway stop and turned the gun on himself after killing the two officers. Bratton said the gunman traveled to New York City from the Baltimore area, where he earlier shot a former girlfriend, and then carried out the killings. Officials said social media postings indicated a hatred of police.

Huge protests erupted in New York and also across the country in recent weeks after grand juries declined to indict white police officers in the deaths of unarmed black men Michael Brown and Eric Garner.

"These officers were shot execution style, a particularly despicable act that goes to the very heart of our society," de Blasio said. "It is an attack on all of us. It is an attack on everything we hold dear."

The Rev. Al Sharpton, who has led protests over the deaths of Brown and Garner, denounced the officers' killings. "I have spoken to the Garner family and we are outraged by the early reports of the police killed in Brooklyn today," Sharpton said in a statement. "Any use of the names of Eric Garner and Michael Brown, in connection with any violence or killing of police, is reprehensible and against the pursuit of justice in both cases."

New York City Councilman Robert E. Cornegy, who represents Bedford-Stuyvesant, told reporters that while there has been a lot of frustration in the community over Garner decision, "I don't think anybody in their right mind would call for the death of an officer." He said both officers were stationed in the neighborhood as part of a months-long crime-reduction initiative that he welcomed.

"This is stunning. We're all as a community stunned," he said. "They were not overpolicing, they were just a presence. … We believe here we been in the partnership with law enforcement to reduce crime. This could not be any worse."

If the gunman was motivated by a hatred of police, it would be the second such attack in recent months. In October, a man attacked a group of officers with a hatchet as they were posing for a photograph. One officer was hit in the arm and another was struck in the head, and the attacker, Zale Thompson, was shot dead. FBI Director James Comey called that assault "an act of terror" that was ideologically driven.

Protests over the deaths of Garner and Brown continued Saturday with protests in the nation's two largest shopping malls, on the busiest shopping day of the year. Twelve people were arrested after crowds briefly shut down parts of the massive Mall of America in Bloomington, Minnesota, and protesters staged a die-in at the King of Prussia Mall in suburban Philadelphia.

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