YES, YES, YES. This is what fucking works, not lame ass gun buyback programs. Round up these motherfuckers and lock them away for good.
Little observations folks, all these misunderstood youths are either Black or Hispanic. Just an observation and add this to the reasons why communities of color are a mess, of course there are many other issues, but this is one of them. And this is also a problem with having fucking projects that are not run properly. Hell, housing projects are problematic to begin with by design.
Oh and for you far left liberals, somehow I don’t think this douchebag below is going to win the Noble Peace Prize. This hood rat should have been aborted at the three month mark.
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From The Daily News:
120 Bronx gang members responsible for multiple murders arrested in largest takedown in NYC history
BY Chauncey Alcorn, Victoria Bekiempis, Thomas Tracy
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Updated: Wednesday, April 27, 2016, 2:53 PM
100 Bronx gang members busted in largest takedown in NYC history
NY Daily News
The largest gang takedown in New York City history led to Wednesday racketeering charges against 120 violent hoodlums for an assortment of crimes — including five murders.
The arrests came in a series of early morning raids by the NYPD, members of Homeland Security Investigations and other federal authorities at more than 100 locations in and around the Eastchester Gardens NYCHA housing complex in Williamsbridge, officials said.
The sweep rang up the largest number of busts in city history as a legion of 700 law enforcers were dispatched to the Bronx, officials said.
Among the charged crimes was the 2009 killing of a beloved 92-year-old woman slain by a stray bullet.
INTERACTIVE: FORMER GANG BANGERS PUSH TO REDUCE GANG VIOLENCE ON BROOKLYN’S MEANEST STREETS
U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara described the suspects as ultra-violent and indiscriminate when it came to their victims.
“If you were in the wrong place at the wrong time, you could be shot, stabbed and even killed,” said Bharara.
The raid targeted the 2Fly YGZ (Young Gunnerz) and the Big Money Bosses — two rival street gangs. Authorities say the gangs wreaked havoc on the area in a turf war around the Eastchester Gardens and the Edenwald Houses, which is less than a mile away.
Of the 100 or so people taken into custody, more than 60 are expected to face criminal charges in federal court for a string of violent crimes, including at least five homicides, according to court documents.
Some suspects are believed to be still on the loose after dodging arrest during Wednesday’s raids.
Bharara said the arrests should help the beleaguered residents of city housing projects.
“If you live in public housing, you also have the right to live in a clean and safe development,” the federal prosecutor said. “It’s clear that many are not getting that.”
BLOODS-LINKED GANG MEMBERS CHARGED IN $414G ID-THEFT RING
The civil division of his office was investigating whether the New York City Housing Authority was meeting federal housing regulations.
Eastchester Gardens residents praised the pre-dawn crackdown in their neighborhood.
“Finally we’re going to be able to sit outside with our children and grandchildren without having to worry,” said Donna Fischer, 61. “We’re getting our development back from these criminals.”
View Gallery 100 Bronx gang members arrested in largest takedown in NYC history
The accused gang-bangers appeared unfazed by the charges, with one flipping off reporters and news photographers outside the 50th Precinct as he was loaded into a U.S. Marshals bus.
“F— you,” another screamed as he was carted away in handcuffs, while a third claimed his innocence.
“I didn’t do it,” he said. “I already did my time. I just got out on parole yesterday. I didn’t do nothing.”
NYPD BUSTING GANG MEMBERS THROUGH SOCIAL MEDIA
Still another took time to blow kisses toward a young woman who had the misfortune of walking past the precinct as he was escorted to the bus.
Jamal Blair pled guilty in the death of Sadie Mitchell, who was hit by a stray bullet sitting in her Bronx home in 2009. Blair was pulled out of jail to be charged with gang conspiracy Wednesday.
Police and federal authorities had search warrants for 120 targets.
“This was a major gang sweep across the Bronx,” one law enforcement source said of Wednesday’s takedown. “The charging documents were quite severe.”
The gangs were responsible for the death of Sadie Mitchell, 92, who was killed by a stray bullet in her living room on E. 224th St. in 2009, officials said.
The two gangs are are also accused of murdering Keshon Potterfield, 18, in 2014; Alexander Walters, 17, stabbed to death in 2012; Donville Simpson, also 17, shot to death in 2013; and Jeffrey (Famous) Delmore, 15, stabbed to death on E. Gun Hill Road last May.
Gang members are also charged with conspiracy, robbery, credit card fraud, weapons possession, and selling marijuana, crack and Oxycodone at area playgrounds like the Agnes Haywood Playground on Barnes Ave. and the Rienzi Playground on White Plains Road, officials said.
They also doled out drugs near the Young Scholars Academy on Barnes Ave. and the St. Mary School on Carpenter Ave.
Mitchell, known as “a mother to everyone on the block,” had lived in her home since 1954.
She was walking into her living room to watch a game show when she was hit with a .9-mm bullet.
Cops later arrested 18-year-old Jamal (Fish) Blair, who claimed at the time that the shooting was an accident and that he had been “framed.”
Blair was later identified as a member of the Big Money Bosses. He ultimately pled guilty to manslaughter and was sentenced to 14 years in prison.
He was pulled out of the Elmira Correctional Facility and was brought to federal court to be charged in the gang conspiracy Wednesday, officials said.
The Big Money Bosses operated along White Plains Road between E. 215th and E. 233rd Sts. — an area known to members as the “Forts.”
The crew also operates along Boston Road near Eastchester Road, which they call “B-Road,” according to court papers.
The 2Fly YGZ operate out of the Eastchester Gardens houses and Gun Hill Road, known to its members as the “valley.”
The NYPD-led operation involved more than 300 HSI members along with representatives from the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives; Drug Enforcement Agency and U.S. Marshals, law enforcement sources said.