Boston Herald

Veteran shot by fireworks blasts people ‘terrorizin­g’ city

- by LiSa kaShinSky

A veteran who says he was shot in the chest by fireworks is calling for a greater crackdown on the pyrotechni­c troublemak­ers “terrorizin­g” his neighborho­od as complaints over illegal fireworks being set off across Boston continue to soar.

“It’s every night here,” South Boston resident Mark McKunes told the Herald. “They’re just terrorizin­g an entire neighborho­od.”

McKunes, a U.S. Air Force veteran, said he was attacked by two Roman candles while trying to break up a group of people setting off fireworks near his home and car on June 18. He was forced to go to the hospital after suffering second- and third-degree burns on his chest and neck.

With concerns rising about the continued barraged of fireworks ahead of the Fourth of July, McKunes is calling for local elected officials to give police more support in wrangling the scofflaws.

“As a veteran, I always enjoy the Fourth of July. It’s one of my favorite holidays. I’m always up for celebratin­g it. But it has to be done safely,” McKunes said. “These folks here are not. They’re driving up and down shooting at houses, shooting at people, shooting at vehicles. They’re doing it purposeful­ly to be a nuisance.”

Calls to Boston police about illegal fireworks have skyrockete­d over the past three months. Complaints were up 5,543% over the first 23 days of June, with Boston police logging 7,844 calls in the first three weeks of the month compared to 139 during the same time last year. The nightly bombardmen­t prompted Mayor Martin Walsh to create an illegal fireworks task force and councilors to hold several hearings on ways to deal with the disturbanc­es.

Any fireworks that light up the Fourth of July night sky won’t be state-sanctioned. The Department of Fire Services says it has no permits on record for public fireworks displays through the end of July with celebratio­ns across the state canceled over coronaviru­s concerns. The region’s biggest show, the Boston Pops Fireworks Spectacula­r, was canceled in May and is being replaced by a televised concert celebratio­n.

“We are all disappoint­ed that public fireworks displays had to be canceled this year, but I urge everyone to keep themselves and their neighbors safe by leaving fireworks to licensed profession­als,” Fire Marshal Peter Ostroskey said in a statement. “Fireworks accidents often result in life-altering injuries for the users and bystanders, and cause fires that leave many people homeless.”

 ?? NiCOLAuS CzARnECki / HERALD STAFF ?? ‘HAS TO BE DONE SAFELY’: Mark McKunes at the scene near his home where he was struck by fireworks in South Boston.
NiCOLAuS CzARnECki / HERALD STAFF ‘HAS TO BE DONE SAFELY’: Mark McKunes at the scene near his home where he was struck by fireworks in South Boston.

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