Boston Herald

8 people shot during Caribbean Carnival parade

Police arrest 2, recover guns

- By Chris Van Buskirk, Joe Dwinell and Flint McColgan MediaNews Group

Boston police arrested two suspects connected to a brazen Saturday morning shooting in Dorchester that left eight people with nonlife threatenin­g injuries, authoritie­s said.

Officers responded to multiple gunshots in the area of 10 Talbot Ave. at 7:43 a.m. just as people were celebratin­g the J’ouvert parade, which happens before the Caribbean Carnival later in the day, Boston Police Commission­er Michael Cox said. The shooting was not related to the parade, according to police, who said they recovered multiple weapons.

Officers stationed at the parade rushed toward the gunfire and started applying tourniquet­s to the wounded, Cox said. The investigat­ion into the shooting is in its early stages, Cox said, but police believe two groups may have had some form of “altercatio­n.”

“I just want to say to any bad actors who want to potentiall­y come to any large gathering or crowd to do harm, that we have many, many officers out here and we will absolutely do all we can to make sure that you are arrested for disturbing any kind of the public’s peace,” Cox said.

Boston police spokesman Sgt. Det. John Boyle confirmed just before 5 p.m. that an eighth person had been shot and suffered nonlife threatenin­g injuries. Cox said earlier in the day that an eighth person may have been grazed by a bullet.

The shooting is not the first to occur during the Caribbean Carnival or J’ouvert celebratio­ns in August. Multiple people were injured and one man was killed in 2015 in less than an hour during three separate incidents.

Dawnn Jaffier, 26, was shot just after 8 a.m. a block from the J’ouvert parade in August 2014 and was later pronounced dead at Boston Medical, the Herald reported at the time. And a man was shot in August 2022 during the second hour of the J’ouvert parade.

But parade organizers asked people Saturday to separate the festivitie­s from the acts of violence. Boston

Caribbean Carnival President Shirley Shillingfo­rd said the media often attaches violence to particular events.

“It was very, very difficult for me this morning to know that something occurred when we work so hard, so incredibly hard to put on something that is more of a family oriented event and peaceful,” Shillingfo­rd said while standing

alongside Cox and Boston Mayor Michelle Wu.

Wu said it is “always just heart-wrenching to hear that a treasured community event has been disrupted by acts of violence from those who had nothing to do with the event.”

“There’s absolutely no excuse for something that is open to the community and part of Boston’s culture and heritage to be talked about

in this way because of the acts that were introduced,” the mayor said.

Wu and Cox planned to march in the second parade Saturday afternoon, which marks the 50th anniversar­y of the event.

Gov. Maura Healey has received “constant” updates on the shooting throughout the day, a spokespers­on told the Herald.

Police were out in force around Talbot and Blue Hill avenues just before 10:30 a.m., hours after shots were fired. Law enforcemen­t were walking up and down Talbot Avenue and appeared to be checking out the parking lot of an auto body shop near the intersecti­on.

Talbot Avenue was littered with remnants from the parade and police had the street closed to vehicles at the intersecti­on before 10:30 a.m.

Cox asked the public for help as the investigat­ion into the shooting continues.

“If anyone has any video evidence and or evidence from their phone or just witnessed the events, we ask them to call B-3 detectives or if you want to remain anonymous, call 1-800-494-TIPS,” he said.

B-3 detectives can be reached at (617) 343-4712.

The annual Caribbean Carnival features two separate parades.

The first parade, the J’ouvert Parade, started at 6:30 AM on Talbot Avenue at Kerwin Street and proceeded up Blue Hill Avenue to the Circuit Drive Entrance for Franklin Park.

The second and main parade, the Caribbean Carnival, began at 1 p.m. on Warren Street at Martin Luther King Boulevard and proceeded on Warren Street to Blue Hill Avenue ending on Blue Hill Avenue at the Circuit Drive Entrance for Franklin Park.

Formation for the Carnival Parade occurs on Martin Luther King Boulevard between Warren and Washington streets.

Suffolk County District Attorney Kevin Hayden said the scope of the tragedy “is mitigated only by the fact that no one was killed.”

“But we see, once again, the consequenc­es of too

many illegal guns in the hands of too many people willing to use them, with zero regard for anyone in the path of their bullets,” he said in a statement. “This happened against the backdrop of a city celebratio­n, but also against the backdrop of a nation that cannot fashion a rational policy on reducing gun violence.”

City Council President Ed Flynn urged organizers to call off the rest of the day’s events.

“Based on the violence from this morning and not having enough police officers in the city, we should cancel it,” he told the Herald.

City Councilor At-Large Erin Murphy said she was praying for the victims and was grateful for the first responders.

“This is an event for children, on a Saturday morning, and it’s appalling that bad actors would visit violence and evil on it,” she said in a statement.

 ?? STUART CAHILL — BOSTON HERALD ?? The intersecti­on of Talbot Avenue and Blue Hill Avenue hours after seven people were shot in the area during the J’ouvert Parade portion of the Caribbean Carnival on Saturday morning in Dorchester.
STUART CAHILL — BOSTON HERALD The intersecti­on of Talbot Avenue and Blue Hill Avenue hours after seven people were shot in the area during the J’ouvert Parade portion of the Caribbean Carnival on Saturday morning in Dorchester.
 ?? STUART CAHILL — BOSTON HERALD ?? BPD Commission­er Michael Cox speaks as Boston Mayor Michelle Wu and Caribbean Carnival president Shirley Shillingfo­rd listen at a press conference after people where shot during a festival parade Saturday morning.
STUART CAHILL — BOSTON HERALD BPD Commission­er Michael Cox speaks as Boston Mayor Michelle Wu and Caribbean Carnival president Shirley Shillingfo­rd listen at a press conference after people where shot during a festival parade Saturday morning.
 ?? PAUL CONNORS — BOSTON HERALD ?? Parade Grand Marshall and former city councilman David Yancey, left, Mayor Michelle Wu, center, and Caribbean Carnival president Shirley Shillingfo­rd, right, cut the ribbon for the start of the Caribbean Festival parade Saturday in Boston.
PAUL CONNORS — BOSTON HERALD Parade Grand Marshall and former city councilman David Yancey, left, Mayor Michelle Wu, center, and Caribbean Carnival president Shirley Shillingfo­rd, right, cut the ribbon for the start of the Caribbean Festival parade Saturday in Boston.
 ?? STUART CAHILL — BOSTON HERALD ?? The intersecti­on of Talbot Avenue and Blue Hill Avenue, where seven people where shot during the J’ouvert Parade portion of the Caribbean Festival on Saturday morning in Dorchester.
STUART CAHILL — BOSTON HERALD The intersecti­on of Talbot Avenue and Blue Hill Avenue, where seven people where shot during the J’ouvert Parade portion of the Caribbean Festival on Saturday morning in Dorchester.
 ?? PAUL CONNORS — BOSTON HERALD ?? Reveler Ashley Hamilton dances in the street while marching in the later Caribbean Festival parade Saturday.
PAUL CONNORS — BOSTON HERALD Reveler Ashley Hamilton dances in the street while marching in the later Caribbean Festival parade Saturday.

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