Pubdate: Sun, 23 Jan 2011
Source: New York Times (NY)
Page: A24
Copyright: 2011 The New York Times Company
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Website: http://www.nytimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298
Author: Al Baker
Bookmark: http://www.drugsense.org/cms/geoview/n-us-ny (New York)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?246 (Policing - United States)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Amadou+Diallo

MAN IS ACCIDENTALLY SHOT IN RAID, POLICE SAY

A New York police officer whose father was killed in the line of duty 
nearly 30 years ago fired an errant shot on Saturday during a drug 
raid in the Bronx and wounded a suspect's 76-year-old father, the 
authorities said.

The officer, Andrew McCormack, 37, and other Emergency Service 
officers accompanied narcotics officers to 1184 Evergreen Avenue 
about 7 a.m. to execute a warrant for the arrest of Alberto Colon, 
41, the police said.

They had forced open the door of Apartment 4D when Officer 
McCormack's weapon discharged one shot, said a law enforcement 
official who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the 
continuing investigation. The round struck Jose Colon, Alberto 
Colon's father, in the abdomen, and he was taken to Jacobi Medical 
Center, the authorities said. He was expected to survive.

"We believe he's accidentally struck," the official said. "At this 
point, it appears to be an accidental discharge."

Alberto Colon, who the authorities said had been arrested more than a 
dozen times, including on narcotics charges, was taken into custody. 
In his apartment, in a neighborhood wedged between the Bruckner and 
Sheridan Expressways, detectives found a small amount of heroin that 
had been packaged for sale, the official said.

Saturday's events will be analyzed by the Police Department's 
Firearms Discharge Review Board to determine if they fit within the 
guidelines for the use of deadly physical force, the official said. 
The office of the Bronx district attorney, Robert T. Johnson, will 
also "review the facts and circumstances" of the case, said Steven 
Reed, a spokesman for the office.

Police Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly later visited Mr. Colon at the hospital.

According to neighbors, Mr. Colon was a respected neighborhood 
fixture who directed a drug counseling clinic, dabbled in politics 
and joined in street demonstrations against police brutality in the 
wake of the 1999 fatal police shooting of Amadou Diallo nearby.

One man said that Alberto Colon, the youngest of Jose Colon's three 
sons, worked at a meat market on Hunts Point Road.

Officer McCormack has earned at least five medals since joining the 
force in 1998, and like his father, Officer Joseph P. McCormack, 
became part of the elite Emergency Service Unit.

He was 10 years old when a mentally disturbed Bronx man shot his 
father, in September 1983. The man, Salvatore Ferrara, 33, fired a 
shotgun blast that ricocheted off a tree, pierced a fold in the elder 
McCormack's bullet-resistant vest and struck him in the heart.

Joseph McCormack was 40 and married with three children when he died.

He had responded with colleagues to 1641 Mulford Avenue, in Pelham 
Bay, around 11:25 a.m., after a report that a man with a history of 
mental illness had barricaded himself inside.

Officers surrounded the house, but Mr. Ferrara held them off for more 
than three hours, the police said. During the standoff, officers were 
able to speak with Mr. Ferrara periodically to try to get him to 
surrender peacefully. But around 2:50 p.m., Mr. Ferrara stepped out 
onto a porch behind the two-family house and fired the shotgun blast 
that hit Officer McCormack, who had been standing behind a tree in an 
adjoining yard.

The blast was said to have passed through the seams of the officer's 
bullet-resistant vest and entered his chest. As he fell, Officer 
McCormack fired a shot, but the shot went wild, the police said.  
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