Pubdate: Wed, 01 Jun 2005 Source: Newsday (NY) Copyright: 2005 Newsday Inc. Contact: http://www.newsday.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/308 Author: Luis Perez, Rocco Parascandola and Pete Bowles Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) POLICE OFFICER SHOT IN B'KLYN A police officer was shot Wednesday night in Brooklyn by a driver he had stopped after spotting him buying marijuana near a violence-plagued public housing project, authorities said. The officer managed to return fire and was fired at again as the suspect sped off, police said. "They never even got a chance to talk to the guy; he shot the officer from the car," an investigator at the scene said. After an intensive manhunt, the suspect was found holed up in a Brownsville apartment. Emergency Service Unit officers stormed the 16th-floor apartment in the Sethlow Houses after hearing a gunshot. The suspect had killed himself with a bullet to the head, police said. The wounded officer, Patrick Caprice, 42, a decorated 14-year veteran, was rushed to The Brookdale University Hospital and Medical Center in a patrol car, where he was in stable condition after undergoing surgery for four bullet wounds, one of them an exit wound. "His vest may have stopped another bullet from entering his chest and saved his life," Mayor Michael Bloomberg said at the hospital. "The perpetrator of this heinous crime appears to have committed suicide shortly after the shooting." Police Commissioner Ray Kelly, also at the hospital, said Caprice was hit in the stomach, the chest and the left forearm. "Clearly, the vest has proven time and time again to be a lifesaver," Kelly said. "It is a critical piece of gear, no question about that." Dr. Eli Kleinman, the Police Department's chief surgeon, said Caprice was "doing very well" after surgery for a shot that cut through his small intestine. Police gave this account: Caprice and his partner had stopped the suspect, identified as David Redding, around 7:15 p.m. on the perimeter of Marcus Garvey Village after seeing him buying marijuana from a man in front of 2 Grafton St. The housing project is described by police as an "OK Corral" of violence. On spotting the officers, Redding sped off in his mother's gold 1988 Ford Contour. The officers gave chase and saw Redding run several red lights. At Bristol and Dumont avenues, as the officers pulled up to the car, Redding fired a .45-cal. handgun from the window and hit Caprice once. Caprice returned fire, apparently hitting Redding in the shoulder. The suspect fired again as he sped off, with the officers in hot pursuit. Redding abandoned the car about a quarter-mile away after slamming it into a black Lincoln near Mother Gaston Boulevard and Belmont Avenue. Witnesses said they saw the suspect run into 131 Belmont Ave. at the Sethlow Houses, where his mother owns an apartment on the 16th floor. Police closed off streets in the area. Officers stood outside the apartment for more than an hour, and they rushed in after hearing a gunshot. Redding was dead from a single shot to the head. A neighbor who knows Redding, who gave only his first name, Antoine, 25, said it is common for police to stop cars in Brownsville at night. "They're pulling us over just because it's late at night," he said. "If police know you're going to cop drugs, they'll hunt you down. The environment around here causes us to over-react sometimes." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin