In this image taken from video, New York city police detain
a group of people near Times Square early Monday, April 5,
2010 in New York. Photo by AP.
Hundreds of young men spilled into midtown Manhattan near
Times Square early on Monday, brawling and shooting guns
after the New York International Auto Show in an annual night
of mayhem the mayor called "wilding."
Four people were shot and 54 were arrested, mostly on charges
of disorderly conduct on the streets not far from the Jacob
A. Javits Center, where the auto show is held. Four men were
arrested later Monday on gang assault charges related to at
least one of the shootings, police said. It wasn't clear
whether anyone who fired shots was among those arrested.
Chief NYPD spokesman Paul J. Browne said additional officers
were on patrol because similar problems have happened during
past auto shows. A teenager was stabbed in a similar ruckus
in 2006, and in 2007, another teen was slashed in the arm.
Browne described those arrested as "young men looking for
trouble" after the auto show.
The fracas rattled businesses near busy districts in Herald
Square, as well as nearby Times Square, where an armed street
hustler was shot dead by police after exchanging gunfire on
the street in December.
"You know it's the cost of doing business," said Angus
McIndoe, owner of the restaurant bearing his name next to
Broadway theaters. "It's not the first time there has been
nutty activity in Times Square."
Auto show spokesman Chris Sams said no one stood out as
suspicious Sunday at the show, which runs until April 11 and
attracts more than 1 million people.
"We had an amazing crowd, a very family-oriented crowd. The
type of person who makes an auto show great, people listening
to the presenters," he said.
Security at the show is tight, and officials work with
police, Sams said. Visitors are checked when they arrive.
Most of the people arrested were men in their 20s from
boroughs other than Manhattan. Some of them could be gang
members, Browne said; the four people arrested on assault
charges - three men ages 17 to 23 and a teenage girl - were
not believed to have fired any shots, police said.
Mayor Michael Bloomberg described the night's events as
"wilding," using a word created by the media during the
notorious 1989 rape of the woman known as the Central Park
jogger. Five men were charged with gang-raping her, but their
convictions were thrown out in 2002.
It was the second major instance of gunfire in the area in
recent months, where police have worked for years to stop
petty crimes and hustlers targeting tourists. Police and a
street hustler armed with a machine pistol exchanged shots in
December in Times Square - shattering a Broadway theater
ticket window and scattering crowds - before police fatally
shot the man.
Overall, crime in the city is still at record lows despite an
uptick in murders, felony assaults and rapes this year.
Jittery lawmakers are worried about crime rising, especially
as the ranks are decreased at the nation's largest police
department.
There were no reports of tourists or business owners being
attacked in the melee. Police weren't sure how many of those
arrested knew each other or what sparked the shootings, which
began shortly after midnight.
A man was shot in the ankle at Eighth Avenue and 40th Street
around 12:10 a.m. Shortly after, a woman was hit with a BB
gun several blocks northeast at Seventh Avenue and 51st
Street. About two hours later, two women were shot - one in
the elbow and another in the thigh - near Seventh Avenue and
34th Street.
All four were in stable condition, police said.
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