MICHAEL O. ALLEN

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Junction Blvd

Cub Scout Leader Held in Slay: Female victim found in Queens rec room By ANNE E. KORNBLUT and MICHAEL O. ALLEN, Daily News Staff Writers

By Homepage, New York Daily NewsNo Comments

nullSunday, June 22, 1997

A respected Queens cub scout leader was charged with murder yesterday, one day after the body of a woman was found in a room where the suspect ran scout meetings.

Perry Buckley, 44, of Corona, who is also a local school board member, was arrested after he was questioned at the 110th Precinct stationhouse about a family dispute yesterday morning, police said.

Buckley was the only person known to have a key to the basement recreation room at 5525 98th Place in Sherwood Village. He lives in a nearby Sherwood Village building with his family.

“I love you, Pam, Carla, Corey,” Buckley shouted to his wife, daughter and son as he was led from the stationhouse last night.

Peter Glasgow, superintendent of the seven-story Nebraska apartment building, made the grisly discovery of the decomposed body — which was in a plastic bag in the recreation room — about 2:30 p.m. Friday, police said.

The unidentified victim had been dead about a week, cops said.

Neighbors in the Sherwood Village housing complex near Lefrak City, who had been complaining since Sunday of a foul odor coming from the drab, gray room, said yesterday they were shocked by the gruesome find.

Some called Buckley a kind and caring neighbor and said they didn’t believe he was capable of killing.

“Everybody knows him,” said Winston MacKenzie, 51, who said he has known Buckley for at least 15 years.

“He’s a neighborhood celebrity. Nobody can understand what’s happening.”

MacKenzie added, “I’m totally confused by the situation.”

He said that when Glasgow told Buckley about the odor last week and asked him for the key to the room, Buckley replied that he had lent it to a “girlfriend.”

“He claimed she had the key,” MacKenzie said. “He said he didn’t have it and would get it back, but we’ve never seen it since. . . . I was saying: How could she get in there? Who could she be? He never gives the key to anybody. He had full autonomy in the room.”

Buckley is the leader of Cub Scout Pack 239 and a member of Community School Board 24. He was Parent Teacher Association president at Public School 14 before gaining the board seat.

His world started unraveling Friday morning, when his wife told 106th Precinct cops that he had assaulted her at 137-27 Cross Bay Blvd.

Police later pulled him over as he drove along Junction Blvd. near 55th Ave. and brought him in for questioning.

He faces a charge of third-degree assault on the complaint filed by his wife. He faces an additional charge of tampering with evidence in the murder case.

“He’s nice, he’s caring; he takes care of the kids,” said a 16-year-old boy who lives in Buckley’s building.

The teen said Buckley’s 15-year-old son, Corey, was told by a relative yesterday that his father had been accused of killing the woman.

The boy later came downstairs where other kids were playing.

“We just saw it in his face,” the teen said. “One of my friends blurted out, ‘He was charged with it wasn’t he?’ and Corey just looked away.”

Raid Bags 2 in Holdup; Shootout suspects nabbed By MICHAEL O. ALLEN and PATRICE O’SHAUGHNESSY, Daily News Staff Writers

By Homepage, New York Daily NewsNo Comments

Sunday, May 11, 1997

Lying in wait outside a Queens hideout, police yesterday captured two of the suspects in the wild 50-shot ambush that wounded a retired cop and a moonlighting detective during a payroll heist in Queens.

A third suspect — believed to be a twin brother of one of the two arrested — still was on the loose, cops said.

Shortly after 1 p.m., officers recovered a duffel bag that contained weapons, believed to be those used in the holdup, and thousands of dollars, believed to be part of the $50,000 cash stolen.

The identities of the suspects were not immediately released, but police said they have criminal records.

Cops staked out a house at 53-18 Junction Blvd. in Elmhurst after they developed information leading to occupants of the house, said Deputy Inspector Michael Collins, a police spokesman.

One suspect drove up in a van, accompanied by a child, and entered the brick and vinyl-sided house, emerging with a bag, which he threw into the van.

He drove on Junction to 55th Ave., and when he turned the corner, officers in a patrol car pulled him over and arrested him.

Within seconds, another suspect came out of the house, walked down Junction to 55th and started running. Cops tackled him.

He was carrying a bag stuffed with money, police said.

Believing that the third member of the vicious robbery team — the twin of the second suspect — was in the area, cops roped off the neighborhood for three hours. Emergency Service Unit cops flooded the area, as sharpshooters patrolled the roofs of nearby houses.

They fired rubber bullets into the house, and then entered. It was unoccupied.

The suspects were taken to the 109th Precinct stationhouse. Charges were pending.

Meanwhile, the retired officer critically wounded in Flushing Friday was due to undergo a second operation today, while the detective was in stable condition.

The police had been looking for three or four men in the bloody holdup outside a printing company on 168th St. and Station Road Friday morning.

The suspects — masked and armed with AK-47s and 9-mm. pistols — sprayed more than four dozen bullets at Joseph Bellone, a retired Bronx police officer, and off-duty Detective Arthur Pettus, who were working as security guards delivering a payroll.

The suspects fled with cash and checks and jumped on a city bus when a flat tire disabled their van, which had been stolen last month.

Bellone, 45, of upstate Newburgh, was in critical condition in the surgical intensive care unit of New York Hospital Medical Center of Queens and under heavy sedation.

His left arm and leg were riddled with bullets, but the wounds to his abdomen are “really serious,” and doctors were still working to repair them, said Brian Salisbury, a spokesman for the hospital.

Salisbury said Pettus, a 38-year-old cop assigned to Bronx robbery, was still in the recovery room in stable condition, alert and awake.

Pettus was shot in the legs and abdomen before he rolled under a van to escape the gunfire. Bellone returned nine shots, but one of the gunmen stood over him and fired at close range.

Police said the robbers fired immediately, aiming low, assuming their victims were wearing bulletproof vests, which they were not.

Late Friday, Bellone’s wife, Catherine, and his sister visited Pettus, who had been asking for Bellone.

Yesterday, Pettus was able to visit with his family.

A woman who lives across the street from 53-18 Junction said police had noticed the twin suspects before.

“Every weekend they come with different, very expensive cars,” said Vanessa Otero, 20. “A few months ago, cops came here, probably because of the cars, but they were not arrested.”

Original Story Date: 051197