Saturday, December 20, 2014

Man Who Killed 2 NYPD Cops Was Owings Mills Shooting Suspect: Reports
Ismaaiyl Abdula Brinsley, 28, is suspected in the shooting deaths
of two NYPD cops on Dec. 20, 2014.
Shooter who killed two officers traveled to New York after shooting former girlfriend in Baltimore County, NY police commissioner said

By Elizabeth Janney (Patch Staff)
December 20, 2014 at 6:48pm

The man who killed two NYPD officers Saturday afternoon before shooting himself was also the suspect in an Owings Mills shooting Saturday morning, Baltimore County police reported.

Baltimore County authorities were sending a flyer alerting New York law enforcement and other agencies to be on the lookout for Ismaaiyl Abdula Brinsley, 28, but “tragically, this was essentially at the same time as our officers were being ambushed,” said NYPD Commissioner William Bratton at a press conference broadcast by ABC Saturday night.

Just before 3 p.m. Saturday, two officers were sitting in a marked police car eating lunch in the Bedford-Stuyvesant area of Brooklyn when the suspect came up to their police car and shot them both in the head, according to Bed-Stuy Patch. They were taken to the hospital, where they were pronounced dead.

“Quite simply,” Bratton said, they were “assassinated.”

After shooting two officers in the head, Brinsley went to a nearby subway station and shot himself, according to Bratton.

Brinsley’s latest residence was in Georgia, but Saturday morning he was in Maryland, where he shot his former girlfriend at her Owings Mills residence, the commissioner said.

In the Owings Mills shooting, the suspect shot a woman he knew in the abdomen before 6 a.m. then left the scene, according to Baltimore County police, who said she was expected to survive.

Related: Owings Mills Shooting Under Investigation

The victim’s mother told police that Brinsley was posting on the victim’s Instagram account, according to Bratton.

A man believed to be the shooter posted a photo of a gun on Instagram with a message that included references to Eric Garner and Michael Brown, two civilians killed by police in recent months, stating that he planned to ”take 2 of theirs,” AOL reported. The Instagram account has since been taken down.

Baltimore County police were alerting New York officials but it was “tragically” too late, Bratton said.

Brinsley had connections to the East Flatbush area of Brooklyn, according to the police commissioner.

Saturday’s shootings marked the first line-of-duty deaths in the NYPD since 2011, according to the New York Times. Bratton said that seven times since 1972, the NYPD has seen partners murdered together.

Authorities urged anyone who learns of violent threats to report them immediately.

The Baltimore County Police Department said Saturday night that its investigation into Brinsley was ongoing.


Police believe New York City cop killer was a member of the Black Guerrilla Family: sources

Ismaaiyl Brinsley, 28, shot two cops dead as they sat in a patrol car in Bedford-Stuyvesant to avenge the deaths of Michael Brown and Eric Garner. He also shot his former girlfriend at her home in the Baltimore area on Saturday morning, police said. Law enforcement sources said the NYPD has dispatched investigators to Baltimore to probe Brinsley's past and suspected involvement with the Black Guerrilla Family prison gang.

BY TINA MOORE , BILL HUTCHINSON
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Saturday, December 20, 2014, 7:11 PM

Ismaaiyl Brinsley, the assassin who executed two cops in Brooklyn on Saturday, is believed to be a member of a notorious prison gang called the Black Guerrilla Family.

Ismaaiyl Brinsley, the assassin who executed two cops in Brooklyn on Saturday, is believed to be a member of a notorious prison gang called the Black Guerrilla Family.

The cold-blooded cop-hater who gunned down two police officers in Brooklyn on Saturday is suspected of being a member of a notorious prison gang that has declared open season on the NYPD.

Detectives were headed to Baltimore on Saturday night to probe Ismaaiyl Brinsley’s ties to the Black Guerrilla Family, sources told the Daily News.

One source said Baltimore police were already investigating Brinsley’s connection to the gang, which started in California’s San Quentin Prison in the 1960s by Black Panther member George Jackson.

“BGF has been talking about getting back at cops for Eric Garner and Ferguson,” a source told The News, citing intelligence intercepted in Baltimore area prisons.

Brinsley boasted on social media about wanting to kill cops hours before ambushing two police officers on Saturday afternoon as they sat in their patrol car outside the Tompkins Houses in Bedford-Stuyvesant.

“I’m putting wings on pigs today,” he posted on Instagram, referencing the deaths of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo., and Eric Garner in Staten Island.

At a press conference on Saturday night, Mayor de Blasio called Brinsley "this horrible assassin."

Brinsley, 28, also shot his former girlfriend in her home outside of Baltimore about 5:45 a.m. before traveling to New York, NYPD Commissioner Bill Bratton said. He took his life by shooting himself in the head inside a subway station near the Tompkins Houses after ambushing the two cops.

The stunning events in New York came just days after Black Guerrilla Family members began spreading the word that they were “preparing to shoot on-duty police officers.”

As the Daily News reported on Dec. 6, an undercover NYPD cop learned of a Black Guerrilla Family plot to kill NYPD officers on Dec. 5 — three days after a Staten Island grand jury decided not to indict Officer Daniel Pantaleo in Garner’s chokehold death in July. At least ten BGF members were “preparing to shoot on duty police officers,” Sergeants Benevolent Association President Ed Mullins said at the time.

The threat prompted police union leaders to advise NYPD officers to take extra precautions, including carrying additional ammunition and wearing bullet-proof vests at all times.

Authorities cracked down at the Baltimore City Detention Center due to the influence that the Black Guerilla Family was wielding inside the lockup.

Authorities cracked down at the Baltimore City Detention Center due to the influence that the Black Guerilla Family was wielding inside the lockup.

But the NYPD investigated the intelligence and later deemed, as The News reported on Dec. 7, that there was no "credible threat" posed by the BGF. “We are aware of the reports of this anonymous general threat against police. However, at this time there is no information to indicate that this is a credible threat against the NYPD,” an NYPD spokesman said at the time.

There also was another reported threat. On Nov. 25, the NYPD spokesman said then, a police department outside of New York received a threat through an anonymous 911 call. The call, which was made to the Baltimore police department, threatened violent retribution against “cops” but did not name a specific department, according to a police source.

Investigative work on that call led NYPD investigators to conclude that the November threat was not real, the NYPD spokesman said, but the department would continue to monitor developments.

Bratton said at the press conference Saturday night that after Brinsley shot his former flame, her family notified Baltimore authorities that he was posting threats on Instagram. The authorities there sent a warning to the NYPD by fax, but it was not received until right about the time that Brinsely struck in Bed-Stuy, Bratton said.

Last year Baltimore law enforcement officials cracked down on the BGF’s stranglehold on the Baltimore City Detention Center because the gang was extorting people, intimidating witnesses and dealing drugs with help from correction officers. An investigation led to the arrest of two inmates and five corrections officers on charges of extortion, witness intimidation and drug dealing in the city jail.

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