logo
Mom of innocent teen shot and wounded outside Stonewall Inn just happy her daughter's alive: ‘Prefer this to picking out caskets'

Mom of innocent teen shot and wounded outside Stonewall Inn just happy her daughter's alive: ‘Prefer this to picking out caskets'

New York Posta day ago
The mother of the innocent teenage girl who was shot and wounded near the iconic Stonewall Inn while celebrating NYC Pride Sunday night said she's just happy her daughter made it out alive — while questioning if anyone was safe anymore.
The New Jersey mom said her heart dropped when she got a call from an NYPD officer telling her that her 17-year-old, Anastasia Cipriano, had been shot in the legs by a stray bullet fired by another teenage girl near the landmarked LGBTQ bar.
'As a parent, that's the call you never, ever want to get. It's terrible,' Star Lopez, 46, told The Post Monday. 'You don't think it's going to happen to you. When it does, it's very scary.'
3 An innocent 17-year-old bystander was caught in the crossfire of a wild melee outside Stonewall Inn Sunday night.
Kyle Mazza/NurPhoto/Shutterstock
Lopez's daughter was an innocent bystander who got caught in crossfire of a feud between two groups of trigger-happy teens in Sheridan Square, just around the corner from The Stonewall Inn in Greenwich Village.
The violence erupted around 10:15 p.m. — hours after the Village hosted the city's annual Pride parade — when a 16-year-old girl opened fire on a male youth in an opposing group, police said.
'This female then produces a 9 millimeter pistol, places it inches away from that male's head, and pulls the trigger two times,' NYPD Chief of Detectives Joseph Kenny told reporters Monday.
The shots missed the intended target, but one of the bullets struck Anastasia, who was visiting the city for Pride from Bayonne, NJ with a friend.
'It's disgusting. She was a good kid trying to do a nice thing. Celebrating Pride. Having a lovely time. And then this. It makes me sick,' the girl's mother said.
Her daughter, who wants to be a doctor when she grows up, was at the wrong place at the wrong time, cops confirmed.
'She had no connection to the shooter, and she had no connection to the previous fight that was taking place,' Kenny said.
The 17-year-old was getting ready to head home when the shots rang out — wounding her and the 16-year-old girl accused of firing the first bullets.
'Anastasia told me the gunshots sounded… incredibly loud. She said they felt like they were coming right behind her,' the mom said.
The bullet traveled through the teen's left thigh and lodged in her right thigh, according to the police chief.
3 A 16-year-old remains in critical condition after being 'gravely' injured during a shootout outside the Stonewall Inn Sunday night, police said.
Diego Luzuriaga/FNTV
Cops rushed the high schooler to the Lenox Hospital, believing she was injured in the chaos following the shooting — before realizing her injuries were gunshot wounds, according to the frightened mom.
She was then transported to Bellevue Hospital, where she underwent emergency surgery. She was still at the hospital on Monday recovering.
'The surgery went well, thank God,' a palpably relieved Lopez said. 'We got lucky this time. We really did. I know there won't be a next time, but we got really lucky this time.'
The mom said she is emotionally exhausted after the roller coaster she's been through but noted it's better than the grim alternative.
'I prefer this to organizing a wake and picking out caskets,' she said.
3 The innocent bystander who was shot Sunday night wants to be a doctor, her mother said.
William Miller
She said she hopes to have Anastasia, who'll be a senior in the fall, back home soon.
Lopez, a certified medical assistant, also offered her prayers to the other girl — her daughter's alleged shooter — who was less lucky.
The 16-year-old was mistakenly shot in the head by a male pal in her same group during the violent teenage melee. The male suspect, who remains at large, pulled out a gun and opened fire at the opposing crew of teens after she fired the first shots — but also missed and instead shot his friend.
The teen was shot once in the head and remains hospitalized in critical condition.
'My heart goes out to that family. I am praying for them,' Lopez said, her voice cracking with emotion.
The random shooting rattled the Garden State mom. She said she now fears that dangers lurk everywhere.
'We're not safe. We're not safe — none of us. Are we?' she said.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Diddy trial is ‘most expensive prostitution trial in American history': expert
Diddy trial is ‘most expensive prostitution trial in American history': expert

New York Post

timean hour ago

  • New York Post

Diddy trial is ‘most expensive prostitution trial in American history': expert

The bombshell sex-trafficking case against Sean 'Diddy' Combs turned out to be the 'most expensive prostitution trial in American history,' one expert told The Post. Defense attorney and former prosecutor Neama Rahmani said Tuesday that if the feds didn't secure a guilty verdict on the racketeering count against the hip-hop mogul, the case would really only boil down to two prostitution charges. 'Like I've said all along, this case will come down to racketeering,' Rahmani said. 'If the government doesn't get a RICO conviction, this will be huge loss and the most expensive prostitution trial in American history.' Diddy was acquitted on sex trafficking and racketeering charges. REUTERS Rahmani predicted the outcome of the jury's verdict — that they would only convict the Bad Boy Records founder of two counts of transportation to engage in prostitution and that they would acquit on two sex-trafficking charges and one racketeering charge. The lawyer said sex-trafficking is difficult to prove because 'consent is a defense' and Combs' lawyers had shown a plethora of text messages that Combs' accusers were eager to participate in 'freak-offs' –or sex-marathons with male prostitutes. 'What a tremendous loss for the prosecution. And a huge win for the defense,' Rahmani said after Wednesday's verdict.

Anti-Israel vandal arrested after pepper-spraying two NYPD cops in Times Square: sources
Anti-Israel vandal arrested after pepper-spraying two NYPD cops in Times Square: sources

New York Post

time2 hours ago

  • New York Post

Anti-Israel vandal arrested after pepper-spraying two NYPD cops in Times Square: sources

A hateful anti-Israel vandal who was caught viciously ripping down Israeli child hostage posters while yelling 'F–k Israel' after Hamas' Oct. 7, 2023 attack was arrested Wednesday after she pepper-sprayed two NYPD officers in Times Square — and tried to take their gun, according to law enforcement sources. Dana Baraket approached the pair of officers on Broadway and 47th Street around 1:20 a.m. and doused them in the eyes and face, police and sources said. The 19-year-old then tried to grab one of their guns as she repeatedly yelled at them to 'kill me,' according to sources. Advertisement Baraket did not get the gun and was arrested at the scene, the sources added. She was charged with assaulting a police officer, attempted robbery, criminal possession of a weapon, harassment and criminal possession of a noxious matter. 3 The two officers were taken to the hospital in stable condition, police said. Kyle Mazza/NurPhoto/Shutterstock Advertisement 3 Dana and Aya Baraket were filmed tearing down posters of Israeli hostages. twitter @ RitaPanahi 3 The two cops were attacked on Broadway and 47th Street around 1:20 a.m. Kyle Mazza/NurPhoto/Shutterstock The two cops were taken to a local hospital in stable condition, according to the NYPD. 'The officers did an excellent job under extreme pressure and stress when they were intentionally ambushed by the attacker,' a law enforcement source said. Advertisement 'Within seconds of being attacked, they quickly de-escalated the situation without anyone being seriously injured, and placed the attacker in handcuffs.' In Oct. 2023 — just weeks after Hamas launched its bloodthirsty attack on Israel, killing some 1,200 people and taking hundreds of hostages — Baraket was filmed tearing down Israeli child hostage posters from a storefront window with her sister while yelling 'F–k Israel' on the Upper West Side. The siblings were confronted by Marilyn Adler and her two adult daughters, who said the pair then turned on them, leaving her frightened that they would harm her children. In the video, shared widely online by the nonprofit StopAntisemitism, Adler's daughter Melissa pleaded with the women to stop, stressing that those pictured on the posters were 'innocent civilians.' Advertisement In response, one of the women yelled, 'F–k you, f–k Israel.' The sisters' father, Hasan Bakaret said he spoke with his daughters after the disturbing confrontation made The Post's front page. Hasan, a New Yorker who immigrated from Lebanon more than 35 years ago, said he disapproved of their offensive language but insisted they are not antisemitic and that their actions were taken out of context. The two women claimed they were provoked by Adler, who they claimed snatched a photo of a Palestinian baby from their hands, the dad said.

Why Bryan Kohberger's guilty plea means he may get the last laugh — and torment his victims further
Why Bryan Kohberger's guilty plea means he may get the last laugh — and torment his victims further

New York Post

time3 hours ago

  • New York Post

Why Bryan Kohberger's guilty plea means he may get the last laugh — and torment his victims further

When Bryan Kohberger pleads guilty to murdering four college students today, he wins control of the narrative and has the last laugh, a murder case expert tells The Post. With a trial averted and the death penalty taken off the table through a plea deal, Kohberger, 30, will go to prison the only person with firsthand knowledge of what he did in the bedrooms of 1122 King Road in Moscow, Idaho, on November 13, 2022, and why. 'With no trial, he gets to keep certain secrets. The air of mystery and in some ways that gives him the upper hand,' Jeff Guinn, author of crime books including 'The Life and Times of Charles Manson,' and 'Waco,' among others told The Post Tuesday. Advertisement Indeed, Guinn notes that the lack of a trial means the victims' families and the general public may never hear evidence of what motivated Kohberger to murder four University of Idaho students, which of them – if any – were the intended target or if he had ever met them. 5 Criminal trial experts tell The Post Kohberger will get the power to spin the story of the despicable crime to suit him from prison when he answers a guilty plea. 5 The University of Idaho victims (clockwise from bottom left): Kaylee Goncalves, 21, Madison Mogen, 21, Ethan Chapin, 20, and Xana Kernodle, 20. Advertisement 'If he decides he wants to make a public statement he's taking control through this deal because he's still living, breathing and talking. As long he can talk, he's got some control,' Guinn said. However, the trauma of the despicable slaughter will continue to burden the grieving families of his victims: Madison Mogen, 21; Kaylee Goncalves, 21; Xana Kernoodle, 20; and Ethan Chapin, 20. Furious family members of the murdered students have already said they will fight the plea deal offered by prosecutors, which puts Kohberger behind bars for life without the possibility of appeal or parole. 'Idaho has failed. They failed me. They failed my whole family,' Steve Goncalves, father of Kaylee, told NBC's 'Today' show. Advertisement Kohberger, who was a Criminology student at Washington State University, just a few miles from Moscow but over state lines, was arrested in December 2022. He was slated to go to trial in August after a protracted legal back and forth delayed proceedings. 5 'By not having a trial, he [Kohberger] gets to keep certain secrets, the air of mystery and in some ways that gives him the upper hand,' Jeff Guinn, author of crime books including 'Manson: The Life and Times of Charles Manson,' and 'Waco,' among others told The Post Tuesday. AP 5 Steve Goncalves, father of University of Idaho student Kaylee Goncalves, speaking during a vigil in 2022 James Keivom Now, Guinn says, it's most likely the majority of evidence amassed by prosecutors about Kohberger's crimes will remain sealed. Advertisement Guinn noted Kohberger's life behind bars could play out much like notorious career criminal Charles Manson, who died behind bars in 2017. Manson was handed the death penalty for murders carried out by his cult in 1971 in California, but the sentence was commuted to life in prison in 1972 when the state briefly abolished the death penalty. 5 Victim Xana Kernodle (middle) with her father Jeff and sister Jazzmin in Dec. 2021. AP '[Charles] Manson set the paradigm for how much notoriety you can get, for how much you can live off your bloody exploits by getting that life imprisonment. Periodically he would say or do something crazy and get his name back in the news,' Guinn told The Post. 'In [Kohberger's] case, if you commit this kind of crime you tend to think of yourself as sort of a God-like figure anyway. The plea gives him a further chance to exist in a way that will get more attention, and make him seem [to himself] more superhuman … I doubt he's taking this plea to quietly disappear into the penal system. 'The secondary thing is I'm surprised the prosecution would do this if they felt they had a slam dunk case.' Although Idaho has the death penalty, its last successful execution was in 2012. An attempt to execute prisoner Thomas Creech in February 2024 was aborted after an hour after the team could not establish a reliable IV line into his body.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store