According to The NY Post; A gay man was gunned down in
Greenwich Village early yesterday allegedly by a bigot who hurled homophobic
slurs at him — a senseless attack that Police Commissioner Ray Kelly called
“clearly a hate crime.”
Brooklyn resident Mark
Carson and a pal were walking on Sixth Avenue near West Eighth Street at around
midnight when the two were approached by Elliot Morales, 33, and two other
Hispanic men, police said.
“Look at these faggots,” one
of the men snarled, remarking on the boots, cut-off shorts and tank tops that
Carson, 32, and his friend were wearing. “What are you, gay wrestlers?”
Carson and his friend turned
right onto West Eighth Street. One of the Hispanic men left. Morales and the
other man kept shadowing them.
“Do you want to die here?”
Morales asked Carson, a manager at a West Village frozen-yogurt shop.
“Is he your boy?” he asked
Carson, pointing at his best friend of 15 years.
When Carson answered “Yes,”
Morales pulled out a silver Taurus .38-caliber revolver and blasted him once in
the cheek, authorities said.
Carson died shortly after at
Beth Israel Hospital.
“I thought that kind of hate
stuff was gone, but I see that it’s not,” the victim’s distraught father, Mark
Carson Sr., told The Post.
“It’s simply ridiculous.
People are what people are. They do what they do. You can’t knock down who
people are.”
After the shooting, Morales
ran east and then downtown. NYPD Officer Henry Huot gave
chase, and busted Morales on MacDougal and West Third streets.
Officers Henry Huot and
Joseph Zinna were two of the NYPD officers who helped to arrest Morales. It took time to identify
Morales because he was carrying a Pennsylvania man’s ID and was “very
uncooperative with detectives,” said cops and a law-enforcement source.
The ex-con, who served 11
years in prison on a robbery conviction, seemed so crazed, cops were
investigating whether he was on drugs, a police source said. The murder is at least the
22nd anti-gay attack in the city so far this year, police said. Anti-gay
attacks are up an alarming 77 percent from 13 such assaults during the same
period last year.
A spate of anti-gay attacks
have plagued the West Village and nearby neighborhoods in recent weeks. As many
as five anti-gay attacks have been reported in the city this month. Council Speaker Christine
Quinn, who represents the West Village and wants to be the city’s first openly
gay mayor, condemned the attacks.
“There was a time in New
York City when two people of the same gender could not walk down the street
arm-in-arm without fear of violence and harassment,” she said.
“We refuse to go back to
that time.”
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