MICHAEL O. ALLEN

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Positive Promotions

Gunfire Disrupts Tranquil Enclave By BLANCA M. QUINTANILLA and MICHAEL O. ALLEN, Daily News Staff Writers

By Homepage, New York Daily NewsNo Comments

Saturday, May 10, 1997

Terrified Queens residents and bystanders dived for cover when a gang of masked gunmen shattered the quiet of a Flushing neighborhood with a Wild West-style shootout.

Suzanne Jenson, who lives in an apartment near the shooting scene at Station Road and 168th St., cowered with her 9-month-old grandson as the bullets flew.

“I went down on the floor and threw myself over my grandson,” Jenson said. “It was pretty frightening. The house was vibrating.”

At one point, the 49-year-old Queens woman crawled to her window and looked out.

“I saw a guy behind a black car. He was yelling, ‘Stay down, stay down!’ ” Jenson said. “It was like putting 20 people around my house and hitting it with sledgehammers.

“You live in your house, you think it’s safe. Now I feel like I live in a war zone.”

Abraham Notak saw two men run out of Positive Promotions, a printing firm on 168th St. The gunfire erupted, and he dived behind a car.

“I saw two guys wearing masks, and they were shooting someone who was on the ground,” Notak said. “I saw one victim fall to the ground. It looked to me like he was trying to save himself. The two guys wearing masks kept shooting at him.”

The shooting was so alarming that a 16-year-old home from school for the day said he “felt like I was watching a movie.”

“They were firing everywhere. They fired straight. They fired down. I don’t think they knew what they were firing at,” the teen said.

As shocked bystanders watched, the gunmen jumped into a stolen van and tore off in the wrong direction on Station Road, a one-way street.

“As soon as they hopped in it, it sounded like they yelled, ‘Go! Go!’ They made a complete U-turn, smacking into every single car,” the teen said.

Seconds later, dozens of cops in riot gear closed in on the shooting scene, while others on foot, in cars and in helicopters searched for the gunmen.

Original Story Date: 051097

Cops Hunt Gang In Brazen Heist: Detective and ex-cop survive bloody ambush by MICHAEL O. ALLEN, DONALD BERTRAND, JOHN MARZULLI, BLANCA M. QUINTANILLA, and JAMES RUTENBERG; Written by JERE HESTER, Daily News Staff Writers

By Homepage, New York Daily NewsNo Comments

nullSaturday, May 10, 1997

Police hunted last night for a heavily armed gang that escaped on a public bus after ambushing an off-duty police detective and a retired cop delivering a payroll in Queens.

Wielding assault rifles and wearing hooded sweatshirts, the gunmen sprayed a quiet Flushing street with more than 50 rounds.

They mercilessly pumped bullets into the lawmen, even as they lay wounded, before grabbing $50,000 in checks and cash.

Retired Police Officer Joseph Bellone, riddled with at least 12 bullets, still squeezed off up to nine shots from his 9-mm. Glock pistol. A gunman was captured on camera standing over the ex-cop, coldly discharging his weapon.

Off-duty Detective Arthur Pettus, who works with Bellone for a payroll company, was struck several times in the legs and abdomen by the three or four robbers. Chunks of concrete shot out by bullets outlined the spot where he dived for cover.

Both victims were in critical condition but are expected to survive the execution-style attack.

The vicious, well-planned stickup unfolded at 10:26 a.m. when Bellone, 45, and Pettus, 38, pulled up in an armor-plated van in front of Positive Promotions, a printing company at 40-01 168th St.

The gunmen popped out of nowhere, firing AK-47s and other weapons from three directions, including an alley abutting the printing company.

“I thought they were firecrackers,” Ari Kayserian, 17, said of the 30-second barrage of gunfire. Kayserian, who lives nearby, ran downstairs to find a wounded Pettus clutching a 9-mm. Glock, hiding behind a van.

“He was calling, ‘Help! Help!’ ” Kayserian said. “The officer told me, ‘Call 911, tell them 10-13’ ” — the code for an officer needing assistance.

Police sources said that a surveillance camera captured several photos — including one of a gunman standing over Bellone and firing bullets into the prone ex-cop.

After rendering the lawmen helpless, the thugs scooped up two canvas bags containing $50,000 in cash and an undetermined amount in checks.

The gang hopped into a stolen green Ford Aerostar van double parked on Station Road and tore up the street the wrong way, ricocheting off parked vehicles.

“There were cars banging each other,” said Kayserian’s mother, Tamar.

The gunmen drove to 162d St. and 45th Ave. and hopped out of the van, which was crippled by a flat tire. They left the doors open and the motor running.

“I saw [three of] them running; you could tell they did something bad,” said Glenn Fammia, a worker at nearby Gabriella’s Pizzeria.

He said they waved down a Jamaica-bound Q-65 Queens Surface Line bus that had just started pulling away.

The gang acted like normal passengers and got off at Hillside Ave. and 164th St. — the same intersection where they had stolen the Aerostar van last month, police sources said.

The bus driver told detectives that the only strange thing about the men was that they paid the $1.50 fare in cash rather than by token, like most passengers. Sources said that one robber left a jacket behind.

No weapons were found.

Mayor Giuliani and Police Commissioner Howard Safir rushed to New York Hospital Medical Center of Queens, where the families of the wounded men gathered.

“It’s a miracle that both have a real chance of survival, given the brutality and viciousness of this attack,” Giuliani said.

“We don’t think that either one will sustain any permanent paralysis,” said Dr. James Turner, adding that both men were shot “many, many, many times.”

Safir said that neither Bellone nor Pettus wore a bulletproof vest. Officers are not required to wear such vests when working off-duty.

Pettus, a former transit cop now assigned to the Bronx robbery squad, had permission to moonlight for Mount Vernon Money Center, officials said. He had worked a 5 p.m. to 1 a.m. shift the night before the shooting.

Workers at the printing company said Bellone was their regular payroll deliveryman and that Pettus was apparently a fill-in.

One police officer said Mount Vernon Money Center guards were wary of the secluded spot.