New York Daily News

Wish I could say ‘sorry’ for wounding 14-yr.-old outside school

- BY ROCCO PARASCANDO­LA, KERRY BURKE AND NOAH GOLDBERG With John Annese

A teen gunman charged Wednesday with attempted murder for the February stray bullet shooting of a 14-year-old outside a Brooklyn school told cops he wishes he could apologize to his young victim, prosecutor­s said.

John Felton, 18, was cuffed for the Feb. 28 shooting, which happened outside Boys and Girls High School. Darius Little, a 14-year-old student at the school, was shot in the ankle.

“The bullet was not intended for you — that is what I would tell him,” Felton told investigat­ors following his arrest Tuesday, according to prosecutor­s. He also said that he would say “sorry” to Darius if he could.

Darius’ father offered his reluctant forgivenes­s to the shooter.

“I have to accept his apology. I don’t want to, but I believe in God,” said Anthony Little, 50, an anger management counselor, told the Daily News. “God asks us to forgive. If I did something bad, I would want forgivenes­s.”

Felton and an accomplice were walking down Utica Ave. near Fulton St. in Bedford-Stuyvesant when Felton opened fire at his targets on the other side of the street, said cops.

Felton told police that when he started firing, he believed his life was in danger.

“I just turn around and just pop,” he said, according to a law enforcemen­t source.

Felton shot into a “crowded sidewalk” striking Darius, who still has a limp nearly three months later, said prosecutor­s.

Darius took cover after being hit in the ankle. He was taken to Maimonides Medical Center and was released two days later.

After the shooting, Felton fled to North Carolina, prosecutor­s said. He told cops who arrested him that he fled south to take care of his aunt, who he said was herself a gunshot victim, according to a law enforcemen­t source.

Felton returned to New York. He took a swing at one of the cops who took him into custody at his Brooklyn home on Tuesday, resulting in a resisting arrest charge, prosecutor­s said.

“I’m glad he got caught,” Anthony Little said. “There’s too many innocent people being killed in these shootings. I’m thankful my son, who was injured, is still here.”

Darius was not available to speak to The News.

The Brooklyn district attorney’s office asked for $500,000 bail in the case. But Brooklyn Criminal Court Judge Simiyon Haniff, seeing Felton’s parents in the courtroom and noting it was the young man’s first arrest, set bail at $100,000.

“That kid had nothing to do with this. He didn’t deserve this. He was just trying to go to school. He wasn’t part of this. That’s not right,” Haniff told Felton in court. “I know the streets are crazy right now. Everybody knows that.”

Darius, who escaped with his life, was luckier than two girls were killed this year in separate stray bullet shootings in the Bronx.

Kyhara Tay, just 11 years old, was killed Monday when she was hit by a stray bullet fired in a botched drive-by shooting.

In April, innocent bystander 16-year-old Angellyh Yambo was murdered by 17-year-old gunman Jeremiah Ryan when he opened fire outside a Bronx school, cops said.

“An 11-year-old girl was killed and the bullet traveled a block. I’m just glad my son made it,” Anthony Little said. “He’s doing better. He’s a humble kid. He’s still adjusting to what happened.”

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