New York police officer shot in head dies from his injuries

Brian Moore (25) is fifth police officer killed in surge of anti-law enforcement sentiment

Authorities say a New York City police officer has died after he was shot in the head by a suspect while in an unmarked car in Queens. Video: Reuters

A New York City plainclothes police officer who was shot in the head died on Monday, the fifth officer shot dead in as many months amid anti-law enforcement sentiment not seen since the turbulent 1960s, police commissioner Bill Bratton said.

Officer Brian Moore (25) was in an unmarked car pursuing Demetrius Blackwell, who was wanted on a weapons charge, when he was shot during the weekend in a residential neighborhood in the New York City borough of Queens, police said.

Mr Bratton said the Queens district attorney on Tuesday would seek a first-degree murder indictment against Blackwell (35) who was being held without bail on attempted murder, assault, weapons possession and other charges.

Lines of police officers salute as an New York Police Department  ambulance carries  the body of  Brian Moore, who died Monday from injuries received when he was shot on Saturday, at Jamaica Hospital Medical Center in New York on Monday evening.
Lines of police officers salute as an New York Police Department ambulance carries the body of Brian Moore, who died Monday from injuries received when he was shot on Saturday, at Jamaica Hospital Medical Center in New York on Monday evening.

The shooting in New York comes amid months of mounting tensions after a series of unarmed black men died at the hands of police officers, the most recent in Baltimore where six officers were charged on Friday in the death of Freddie Gray.

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Mr Moore is the first New York City officer killed in the line of duty since two uniformed officers were ambushed last December. He was the fifth city officer shot in five months.

Mr Bratton, speaking at a press conference late Monday, was asked for his perspective on the violence against NYPD officers amid nationwide protests over accusations of police brutality.

“You’d have to almost go back to the late 60s to early 70s to see a time when there was so much anti-police sentiment in the country,” Mr Bratton said.

“These are strange times,” Mr Bratton said.

Mr Moore and his partner had been trying to question Mr Blackwell, who has an extensive criminal background, after they saw him seeming to adjust an object in his waistband, police said.

Police said Mr Blackwell pulled out a gun and fired into the vehicle, striking Mr Moore.

The weapon, which was later recovered, had been stolen in Georgia in 2011, Mr Bratton said.

Mr Moore, who came from a family of police officers, joined the New York City Police Department in July 2010, according to Mayor Bill de Blasio. He lived in the suburban Long Island town of Massapequa.

Uniformed officers who had kept vigil outside Jamaica Hospital in Queens saluted as Moore's body was taken away in an ambulance.

The mayor, in a statement, expressed his sympathies.

“Our hearts are heavy today,” he said. “Brian served with distinction and he put his life on the line each day to keep us all safe.”

Unlike the shooting in Brooklyn days before Christmas of officers Rafael Ramos and Wenjian Liu, who were targeted for being in uniform, Mr Moore was in plainclothes and in an unmarked car, authorities said.

Two New York plainclothes officers were shot while responding to an armed robbery in the Bronx in January and survived their injuries.

Reuters