New York Post

Street-shoot bust

B’klyn rifle suspect has lengthy record

- By JOE MARINO and JORGE FITZ-GIBBON jmarino@nypost.com

A career criminal is in custody after police said he opened fire at a crowded Brooklyn intersecti­on last week, sending more than 20 people scrambling for safety, law enforcemen­t sources said.

Surveillan­ce photos show the gunman — identified by sources as Terrel Norman, 36 — clutching an automatic rifle on East 102nd Street before jumping into a Nissan Sentra with a pal.

Cops pulled the car over several blocks away and arrested both men, the sources said.

None of the intended targets was hit.

Norman has a history of emotional disturbanc­e and a lengthy rap sheet that includes more than two dozen busts, a stint in state prison on an armed robbery conviction and a pending Brooklyn gun case, according to records.

Police said Norman was pulled over in March on a traffic violation when cops determined he was allegedly driving without a license — and with a loaded .45-caliber handgun inside the vehicle, the sources said.

He was initially released on bail, but the bail was rescinded after prosecutor­s didn’t get an indictment in the case in five days — as required by state speedytria­l statutes.

Police could not determine if the gun in the car belonged to him or one of his passengers, and are awaiting DNA results to determine if there’s a case.

“This individual has no regard for consequenc­e,” one law enforcemen­t source told The Post. “You have someone, multiple warrants, parole at various times or probation, and he has a wreckage wherever he goes in life.”

Norman is on parole until 2025 after serving state prison time for a 2017 robbery.

Among the arrests on his rap sheet are busts for attempted criminally negligent homicide, attempted assault, reckless endangerme­nt and multiple gun charges.

Sources familiar with Norman’s record said he’s been arrested in dozens of other incidents, but those records are not public.

According to arrest records, he had a history of emotional disturbanc­e and was recommende­d for psychiatri­c evaluation after his March arrest this year.

His previous busts include ones for drunken driving, acting in a manner injurious to a child and several illegal gun possession charges, according to the sources.

Norman was released from the upstate Washington Correction­al Facility in 2019 after serving time for the earlier robbery conviction in Brooklyn.

It was not clear Monday if Norman had been arraigned yet on the most recent charge of firing a gun into a crowd.

Brooklyn Defender Services, which represents Norman, did not immediatel­y reply to a request for comment from The Post.

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