The man who shot and killed two New York
City police officers as they sat in their patrol car had posted angry messages
on social media, ranting against the government and police, New York Police
Department's Chief of Detectives Robert Boyce said Sunday.
Ismaaiyl Brinsley, 28, also posted messages of self-loathing
and despair and made reference online to Michael Brown and Eric Garner,
African-American men who were killed by police.
"I'm Putting Wings on Pigs Today. They Take 1 of Ours,
Let's Take 2 of Theirs," an Instagram post read, authorities said.
Brinsley had a lengthy criminal record. He was arrested 15
times in Georgia for assorted crimes and arrested four times in Ohio, Boyce
told reporters Sunday.
He was in prison in Georgia between August 2011 and July
2013 for criminal possession of a weapon, Boyce said.
Brinsley had an address connected to him in Georgia but that
appears to be his sister's home, and they are estranged, Boyce said. The
gunman's connection to Brooklyn is that his mother lives there, but they are
also estranged, the chief of detectives said.
On Saturday afternoon, Brinsley fired four rounds at
officers Rafael Ramos and Wenjian Liu in the Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood.
The officers, who were hit in head, were assigned from their normal downtown
Brooklyn beat to an area of the borough with a high crime rate, authorities
said.
New York City Police Commissioner William Bratton said the
officers were shot "with no warning, no provocation."
Witnesses saw Brinsley walk to the car and assume what they
described as a shooting stance.
"They were, quite simply, assassinated," Bratton
said.
At a nearby subway station, Brinsley was found dead of a
self-inflicted gunshot wound, authorities said.
A message from a teenage son of Ramos' showed the
heartbreaking devastation the crime has caused.
"Today is the worst day of my life," 13-year-old
Jaden Ramos posted on Facebook about the slaying of his father, Rafael Ramos.
"Today I had to say bye to my father," the
teenager wrote. "He was (there) for me every day of my life; he was the
best father I could ask for. It's horrible that someone gets shot dead just for
being a police officer. Everyone says they hate cops but they are the people
that they call for help. I will always love you and I will never forget you.
RIP Dad."
The thin blue line
Family and friends of Ramos spoke to reporters Sunday,
expressing support for police and a desire for change.
"We're just hopeful that this tragedy will not be in
vain and that we will be able to heed the words of the Ramos family and bring
the city together to heal," said U.S. Rep. Hakeem Jeffries, a Democrat who
represents large sections of Brooklyn.
Ramos had just turned 40; Liu had been married two months
ago.
Both had dreamed of being police officers, Bratton said.
"One of the unfortunate realities of policing is that
you put that blue uniform on and you become part of the thin blue line between
us and anarchy," Bratton said.
He sent a memo to NYPD officers about the killings, saying
the officers were "targeted for their uniform, and for the responsibility
they embraced: to keep the people of this city safe."
Liu and Ramos "will be remembered," he wrote.
"They will join a line that is too long, a line of partners who served
together and made the ultimate sacrifice together." The memo then named
other officers who have lost their lives. "May God grant Officer Wenjian
Liu and Officer Rafael Ramos rest. And
to all members of the service, be safe," he said.
New York Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo directed that all flags on
state government buildings in New York City be flown at half-staff.
Mayor Bill de Blasio and Bratton met with the families of
the victims.
"When a police officer is murdered, it tears at the
foundation of our society," the mayor said. "It is an attack on the
very concept of decency."
President Barack Obama condemned the shooting, and called
Bratton on Sunday to express condolences for the slain officers.
"Two brave men won't be going home to their loved ones
tonight, and for that, there is no justification," Obama said in a
statement. "The officers who serve and protect our communities risk their
own safety for ours every single day -- and they deserve our respect and
gratitude every single day."
U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder called the attack "an
unspeakable act of barbarism."
The suspect and his lethal travels
Brinsley arrived in New York from Baltimore but had a home
in the Atlanta suburb of Union City, Georgia.
Boyce said that there is no indication that Brinsley had any
gang ties, and police have found no religious statements on social media
accounts that investigators continue to pour through.
Before he arrived in Brooklyn by bus, Brinsley had shot and
seriously wounded an ex-girlfriend in Baltimore on Saturday morning, Boyce
said. Shaneka Nicole Thompson, 29, was shot in the abdomen, Baltimore
authorities said Sunday.
She is in critical but stable condition at a hospital,
authorities told CNN. Investigators were able to talk to her, Boyce said. She
said that when Brinsley showed up at her apartment, they argued. Her mother
called during that and heard the bickering but the phone hung up, according to
Boyce. The first call to 911 came at 5:50 a.m. from a neighbor who heard shots
fired.
Brinsley later called the mother back and apologized for
shooting her daughter, saying it was an accident and that he hoped she lived,
Boyce said.
Baltimore authorities communicated to New York police Sunday
at about 2:10 p.m. when Baltimore County police made a phone call to the 70th
Precinct in New York to tell police there that the phone of a suspect wanted in
Thompson's shooting was pinging at a location in the 70th Precinct.
The two police departments discussed an Instagram post,
allegedly by Brinsley, that read, "I'm Putting Wings On Pigs Today."
The posting made reference, police said, to the high-profile deaths of
African-Americans Michael Brown and Eric Garner. Police officers killed both
men.
"They Take 1 Of Ours, Let's Take 2 of Theirs," the
post said, according to authorities. The account also displayed a handgun and a
message that said it might be the poster's last message.
Baltimore County police also faxed a "wanted"
poster to New York police with information about Brinsley.
Records show Brinsley had a lengthy arrest record in
Georgia, mostly involving charges of shoplifting and illegal weapons
possession, records show.
He was also charged with property damage and obstructing a
police officer and pleaded guilty to many of the charges, according to police
and court records.
Reaction: 'This can't happen'
The shooting shocked residents in the neighborhood.
"This can't happen. If you mad at somebody, be mad at
the person that you are mad at. Now, we have two families that (are) missing
somebody for the holidays," Shaniqua Pervis told CNN affiliate WABC.
"Where is your humanity? I know it's a war going on and
shoutout to Eric Garner's family and everybody else who lost somebody, but
you're not at his house, on his lawn. This is two (officers). You don't even
know if (they were) good or bad. I don't condone this, and I'm not with
it."
The woman was referring to the controversial July death of
the unarmed black man after New York police officers on Staten Island wrestled
him to the ground, with one of the officers wrapping his arm around Garner's
neck in a chokehold.
Source: CNN
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