The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

For the 2nd time this year, NYPD gunfire kills 1 of its own

- By Michael R. Sisak

NEW YORK >> For the second time this year, a New York City police officer has been killed by friendly fire.

Officer Brian Mulkeen, who was shot while struggling with an armed man Sunday, was fatally struck by two police bullets during the confrontat­ion on a Bronx street, Police commission­er James O’Neill said.

“This is an absolute tragedy,” O’Neill said Monday, though he quickly turned the blame on the man Mulkeen was grappling with, who was also killed during the burst of gunfire.

“Make no mistake, we lost the life of a courageous public servant solely due to a violent criminal who put the lives of the police and all the people we serve in jeopardy,” O’Neill said.

Investigat­ors are still piecing together exactly what happened, but police officials described a chase and fight that led to a chaotic moment in which six officers fired 15 shots in about 10 seconds.

Mulkeen, 33, was on patrol with a plaincloth­es anti-crime unit when he and his partners encountere­d Antonio Williams, 27, around 12:30 a.m. Sunday near a public housing complex, police said.

For reasons that remain unclear, the officers chased Williams, who was on probation following a drug arrest last year and previously served 3½ years behind bars for burglary.

Mulkeen grabbed him and the two began wrestling.

O’Neill said Mulkeen could be heard on bodyworn camera footage saying, “He’s reaching for it! He’s reaching for it!”

Investigat­ors had previously suggested that Williams had wrested the officer’s gun away as the pair struggled. But police said Monday that Mulkeen retained control of his gun and fired five shots after Williams reached toward his waistband, said Deputy Chief Kevin Maloney of the NYPD’s Force Investigat­ion Division.

Other officers fired a total of 10 shots.

A loaded .32-caliber revolver belonging to Williams was recovered at the scene, police said. It had not been fired.

Police officials said they were still investigat­ing whose shots killed Williams.

“Anybody who wants to play the ‘blame the cops’ game with this tragedy needs to swallow their rhetoric and look at the facts,” said Patrick Lynch, president of Mulkeen’s union, the Police Benevolent Associatio­n.

“That perp is the one who carried an illegal gun onto our streets. He is the one who chose to fight with the cops. He is solely responsibl­e for our hero brother’s death.”

All of the officers except Mulkeen activated their body cameras. He was unable to amid the struggle with Williams, O’Neill said.

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