Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Teen, 15, arrested in shooting at amusement park that hurt 3

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WEST MIFFLIN (AP) >> A 15-year-old has been arrested in last month’s shooting at a western Pennsylvan­ia amusement park that wounded three people, including two teenagers.

Allegheny County and West Mifflin police said last week that the teenager is being charged as an adult with aggravated assault, reckless endangerin­g and firearms crimes in the Sept. 24 gunfire at Kennywood Park on the opening night of the park’s Phantom Fall Fest.

Park officials said the late Saturday night shooting followed an altercatio­n between two groups of teenagers near the Musik Express ride at the park in West Mifflin, southeast of Pittsburgh. A 39-year-old man and two 15-year-old boys were taken to hospitals with leg wounds, authoritie­s said.

Investigat­ors said last week that evidence recovered at the scene indicated that there were two guns fired, one of them by the teenager arrested. He himself was also grazed on the thigh by a bullet, and authoritie­s are searching for a second suspect, which Christophe­r Kearns, the county police superinten­dent, said is “most likely” a juvenile.

Kennywood closed for the day after the shooting and announced new security measures including more police, more security along perimeter fences, limits on bag sizes and masks covering faces and requiring adult chaperones for all juveniles at all times during the Fall Fest, scheduled to run until mid-October.

Kearns said it remains unclear how the weapons got into the park, and investigat­ors are still looking at the possibilit­y that the weapons were tossed over the park fence or carried by someone jumping the fence. Officials said they are cutting down trees along the perimeter fence to improve visibility and installing new floodlight­s and security cameras to completely cover the fence line. They also vowed to “significan­tly” increase security patrols.

Authoritie­s said they believe the gunfire stemmed from a feud between two groups of teenagers that has led to scores of shootings in several Mon Valley

communitie­s. Victor Joseph, county police assistant superinten­dent, cited 55 calls for shots fired in Duquesne and Homestead, the communitie­s of the rival groups.

“We all know that this is a serious problem,” Joseph said. “The people who live in these communitie­s know how serious it is. People who have lost loved ones due to gun violence and incarcerat­ion know how devastatin­g it is.”

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