20 people shot in NYC on July 4, including 7 during barbecue in Ocean Hill, Brooklyn

Sandra Bookman Image
Tuesday, July 5, 2016
7 shot at barbecue in Brooklyn
Sandra Bookman has the latest developments in a Fourth of July shooting at an Ocean Hill barbecue.

OCEAN HILL, Brooklyn (WABC) -- 20 people were shot in 12 shooting incidents in New York City on the Fourth of July, including seven who were wounded at a barbecue and graduation party in Brooklyn Monday night.

Police said four men and three women were wounded in a private greenspace outside a Chauncey Avenue apartment building in Ocean Hill around 11:30 p.m.

Two of the men are 18 and the other two are 19 and 20. The three women are 17, 19 and 20. They were shot in the legs, arms and torso; all are expected to survive. At least one already has been released.

Detectives were talking to a person of interest, but it is unclear if that person is the suspected gunman. The investigation is continuing.

Police are trying to determine whether the gunman was denied access to the event, and came back with a gun in retaliation.

One of the victims, Bless Thomas, 18, said Tuesday that he never saw the shooter, just heard the shots and then screaming. "Everything was good. We was enjoying ourselves," he said. "Everybody was running, screaming, trying to get somewhere safe."

Thomas said there were about 80 people at the backyard barbecue. Police said they believe the shooter fired into the backyard from the street.

Condo board president Ted McQueen, an eyewitness, said he wasn't sure whether it was fireworks or gunshots, but when he walked around the corner, he literally ran into people in a panic. "It makes it bad because it make it look like these young people brought the trouble. No, the trouble came to them. They was having a good time."

But the partygoers were boxed in, the only way out was straight toward the shooter. The shooter slipped away, leaving behind casings and chaos.

McQueen says he OK'd Monday night's party and insists organizers are in no way responsible for the shooting.

"They were there to have a festive time period," he said.

Investigators spent much of the morning going over the crime scene, trying to piece together what triggered the incident and who may be responsible.

Officers even passed out flyers urging neighbors for information to help stop the violence that turned a community gathering into a crime scene.

"The fact that nobody was killed, yes, that's a great relief on my part," said McQueen.

OTHER VIOLENCE

Earlier in the night, a 22-year-old man was shot in the chest at Broadway and Chauncey Street in Brooklyn. It happened at around 9:30 p.m. Police said it was originally believed to be connected with the barbecue shooting, but later said it was not.

He walked into a nearby firehouse and was taken to Brookdale University Hospital in stable condition. Three men and two women fled on foot.

Another shooting took place at 10:15 p.m., when an 18-year-old man was shot five times at Wilson and Cooper streets in Bushwick, Brooklyn. No arrests were made in that shooting.

At 11:15 p.m., a 22-year-old man was shot in the right leg while walking on St. John's Place and Franklin Avenue in Crown Heights.

Just after midnight, a man was shot at Ocean Avenue and St. Paul's Court in Prospect Park South, Brooklyn.

Also around midnight, a woman walked into Kings County Hospital with a gunshot wound; she had been shot at an unknown location.

At 12:30 a.m. Tuesday, a man was shot on Intervale Avenue near Chisholm Street in the Bronx. He sustained non-life-threatening injuries.

Earlier in the evening, at 5:15 p.m., a 24-year-old man shot twice in the back on East 29th Street in Flatbush, Brooklyn; at 8:15 p.m., a 20-year-old man was shot in the head at East 116th Street and Pleasant Avenue in East Harlem.