A 13-year-old boy who believes the police delivered the gun that killed an innocent 16-year-old girl in a Bronx-Schoolplein last week, was caught, according to sources of law enforcement.
The boy – who had been picked up since the deadly shooting at Morris High School Evette Jeffrey on 12 May, was picked up on Monday morning in the Apartment building of the US Marshals in the apartment building of a family friend in the Boshuizen of Nycha, the sources said.
There are charges in treatment against the boy, who turns 14 in two months and the second teenager was picked up in connection with the meaningless murder.
The alleged 14-year-old shooter, who appeared before a judge from a hospital bed at the end of last week, was accused of second-degree murder, said prosecutors.
He did not argue and was ordered without bail.
“The suspect fired countless shots in the direction of about 20 school-going children,” said Assistant Officer of Justice Timothy Collins. “The suspect hit an innocent bystander, a 16-year-old girl, in the head. The incident is on video. The suspect is identified as the shooter.”
The boy is said to have used a semi-automatic gun during the early evening Melee outside 800 Home St. in the Morrisania district. The building houses three schools: Dr. Richard Izquierdo Health and Science and Science Charter School, Bronx Latin and Bronx Career and College Preparatory High School.
Researchers believe that the chaos was fueled by a feud between street gangs – the forest about everything the crew and a starting gang called himself Kreep on Davidson, located in the Davidson Houses Public Housing Complex, said Nypd -chief of Detectives Joseph Kenny last week.
“The victim, Evette Jeffrey, was not involved in this dispute,” said Kenny. “She was an innocent bystander who just tried to find cover behind the brick wall and was beaten by one of the rounds.”
Family members said Evette celebrated her first birthday with her boyfriend, also 16, in a Chinese restaurant after school and decided to stop at the playground – where she was in the fire line.
“She’s 16,” said the girl’s grandmother. “That’s it.”
Evette’s grandmother could not bring himself to forgive the young people involved in the daylight that cost the life of her granddaughter.
“I don’t forgive you,” she sobbed. ‘I keep your family responsible because they should keep an eye on you. Those who handed you [the gun] Or had it, I’ll never forgive you. ‘
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