Two New York City police officers were shot early Monday while chasing a suspect, who authorities say is an illegal immigrant from Venezuela, while investigating a pattern of robberies involving suspects on scooters.
The shooting happened just before 1:45 a.m. at the intersection of 89th Street and 23rd Avenue in the Elmhurst neighborhood of Queens.
The two officers, part of the 115th Precinct’s public safety unit, attempted to pull over a male suspect driving a scooter the wrong way when the suspect began to flee on foot. During the foot chase, the suspect shot at the two officers, who returned fire.
One officer was shot in the stomach area of his bullet-proof vest, while the other officer was shot in the leg. Both officers were rushed to hospitals in stable condition and are expected to recover.
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“Every day New Yorkers are not wearing this,” New York City Mayor Eric Adams said during a press conference from Elmhurst Hospital while holding a wounded officer’s bulletproof vest and pointing to a bullet hole in the front.
“This is what we’re fighting every day,” Adams said, calling the shooting a “senseless act of violence” and a “total disregard for life.”
The suspect was shot in his right ankle and also taken to a hospital. Police said the gun that the suspect used in the shooting was illegally possessed.
The suspect was identified as Bernardo Raul Castro Matta, a 19-year-old man from Venezuela, who police said entered the country illegally through Eagle Pass, Texas. He was living at a former Courtyard Marriott hotel in Queens that is now being used as a migrant shelter, according to police.
While Castro Matta has no prior arrests in New York City, police said he is a suspect in multiple robbery patterns in Queens.
Police said one wounded officer has served the department for 5 years, while the other wounded officer has over two years on the job.
Patrick Hendry, president of the Police Benevolent Association in New York City, said the two officers put “their lives on the line to keep New Yorkers safe.”
“The one police officer, shot in the vest, was more concerned about his partner, saving his life, getting a tourniquet,” Hendry said during the press conference. “That’s what partners do in the NYPD; they save each other’s lives.”
Scooters and motorbikes are being used citywide to commit crimes including shootings, robberies and phone snatches, according to police. Authorities said these patterns have seen a dramatic spike over a three-year period.
From Jan. 1 to June 1, 2022, police said there were no robbery patterns involving scooters. During the same period in 2023, these patterns increased to 20. From Jan. 1 to June 1, 2024, police said there were over 80 of these incidents.