A 14-year-old girl and a 12-year-old boy were shot and wounded in a drive-by shooting during an impromptu rap contest last night around 9 p.m. in Hunting Park, cops said.
Both shooting victims were taken to Albert Einstein Medical Center where they were listed in stable condition, police said.
As the crowd scattered from the shooting scene on Old York Road near Wingohocking, police had to disperse a crowd of about 1,000 kids at Broad Street and Hunting Park Avenue.
The same large crowd may have trickled down into the Hunting Park Broad Street Line station, cops said, but they were dispersed without incident. A short time later, police received word that the group might converge on South Street but police reported no incidents as of late last night.
Gun buyback program today
The Southwest Philadelphia Community Advisory Group, along with Power99 radio and the city, will host a gun buyback program today at the Myers Recreation Center, 58th and Kingsessing Avenue.
Among the incentives offered for those that turn in weapons are $100 gift cards, Xbox 360s or PlayStation 3s, while supplies last.
Gun task force charges 23
Twenty-three people have been arrested and charged with gun trafficking by the Gun Violence Task Force.
Among those busted are people who filed false paperwork to buy guns and a suspect who allegedly stole 10 guns.
The task force has made 472 arrests and seized 847 firearms since December 2006.
A 19-year-old suspect was critically wounded during a police involved shooting in Frankford on July 17.
CBS
A teenage suspect remains in the hospital after a police involved shooting in the Frankford section of the city Saturday evening.
Officers were searching for an armed robbery suspect in the area when they spotted a 19-year-old male place a handgun into his waistband.
When police attempted to question the teen, he fled into a lot near Griscom and Wakeling Streets.
"Once inside the vacant lot, the male pulled the handgun from his waistband. Three officers from the 15th District, all in uniform, told the male to drop the gun. The male did not drop the gun," said Chief Inspector Scott Small.
The officers opened fire on the suspect, striking him at least once in the chest. He was rushed to nearby Frankford Hospital in critical condition.
Witnesses reported hearing numerous gunshots, but it is unclear if the suspect discharged his weapon. None of the officers were injured during the incident.
The suspect's 9mm Beretta was recovered at the scene. Investigators are reviewing nearby surveillance cameras.
No clear connection has been made to the suspect and recent robberies in the area or the July 15 shooting of Officer Kevin Livewell in Kensington.
All officers involved are being questioned by Internal Affairs, as per standard procedure following a police involved shooting.
Philadelphia Police have identified a suspect wanted in connection with Thursday's shooting of an officer in the city's Kensington section.
Anel Cuenas, 27, is believed to have fired a weapon that struck Philadelphia Police Officer Kevin Livewell during a shootout in the 3000 block of N. Water Street.
According to police, Officer Livewell and his partner, from the 24th District, were involved in a shootout after pulling over a van that matched the description of a suspicious vehicle occupied by armed males. As the uniformed officers exited their marked car, at least two suspects immediately opened fire on the officers.
The officers returned fire. During the exchange, Officer Livewell was struck in his right leg below his knee. He was taken to Temple University Hospital where he remains listed in stable condition awaiting surgery.
His partner was not injured and was able to tackle and arrest the driver of the van. Two Hispanic male suspects were able to get away on foot and were last seen fleeing north on Clearfield Street.
Cuenas should be considered armed and dangerous and according to police, may be operating a white Lexus.
If you have any information about the whereabouts of Cuenas or the other suspect, please contact the Philadelphia Police Department at 215-686-3334 or dial 9-1-1.
A man was shot on a SEPTA trolley at 57th Street and Chester Avenue in Kingsessing last night and, in a stampede to get off the trolley, a mother and her 3-year-old child were trampled, police said.
The power line to the trolley was disconnected by someone to disable it, Lt. Frank Vanore said. When the conductor got out of the trolley to reconnect the power, an unknown man boarded and began a confrontation with another passenger.
At some point, a firearm was drawn and one man was shot. During the panic to flee the trolley, the mother and child were trampled, Vanore said. The 3-year-old was taken to Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, where the child's condition was not immediately known.
The shooting victim flagged down police at 58th Street and Kingsessing Avenue and was taken to the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania.
Man charged in shooting
Karim Anthony Brown, 18, of North Philadelphia, has been charged in connection with shooting a 22-year-old man while trying to flee from two plainclothes officers.
The officers tried to question Brown about 12:30 a.m. Saturday on 28th Street near Cumberland, police said. He ran into an alley, and the officers heard a gunshot. The officers caught up with Brown on 27th Street near Albert. That's where they found a man who had been shot in the left arm and right leg. The man identified Brown as the shooter, police said.
No suspects in fatal incident
A 27-year-old man was shot to death on Mutter Street near Dauphin, North Philadelphia, at 11:25 Saturday night. Police did not release his name, pending notification of next of kin. The victim was shot in the head and neck. He was pronounced dead at 12:04 yesterday morning at Temple University Hospital. Police had no suspects or motive.
Suspect shot by police
Carnell Williams, 29, of Lardner Street near Bustleton Avenue, in the Northeast, was shot and wounded critically when he pulled a gun on three police officers Saturday night on Harrison Street near Griscom.
Police said the officers saw the suspect walking on the street with what appeared to be a handgun in his waistband about 7:30 p.m. He fled on foot, and when the officers stopped him in a vacant lot, he pulled out a gun, Lt. Frank Vanore said. Three officers fired their weapons several times. Police said they recovered a 9 mm. weapon.
Charged with murder
Mark Mosley, 27, of Pennsauken, has been charged in the murder of Simere Peoples, 20, also of Pennsauken, the night of April 27 at 32nd and Pelham Streets. Witnesses said they saw the two men arguing before Mosley pulled a gun and shot Peoples.
UNDER A blistering sun, as sweat dripped down his face, Ariel Morales stood among knee-high weeds and empty beer bottles in a vacant Camden lot.
He looked at the badly decomposed, blackened and bloated body. At first, he didn't want to believe it. But the gold hoop earrings, the Mickey Mouse tattoo on the forearm, the flip-flops and ankle bracelet confirmed his deepest fear. It was Jenna. His beautiful auburn-haired niece.
"I was in denial for the first two seconds or first two minutes," Morales said. "I was really hoping it was somebody else."
It was Morales who first found Jenna Lord's body in a drug-infested section of South Camden about 1:30 p.m. yesterday, less than two hours after about 40 of her family and friends set out in Camden to look for the 23-year-old mom from Collingdale, Delaware County.
Lord's family hadn't heard from her since the morning of July 5, when she called home from a train station in downtown Camden. She had spent the July 4 holiday at a family barbecue in Collingswood, N.J., and was headed home, her family said.
Yet surveillance cameras showed Lord getting off the train in Philadelphia, picking up what appeared to be clothes from a woman, then heading back to Camden on the train, according to police.
Almost from the moment she went missing, Lord's family believed she was abducted. They blasted police on both sides of the Delaware River, claiming cops weren't doing enough to find her. Lord's mother, Desiree Caruso, appeared on national television and said police had written her daughter off as a "junkie." Lord once struggled with drug addiction, but had been "clean for months" and found strength from her daily Bible readings, her family said.
Yesterday's grim discovery further fueled her family's fury. They argued that police - not her uncle - should have been the ones to find her.
"Them cops didn't find nothing - not a damn thing. He did," said Lord's grandfather, Vincent Caruso, gesturing toward Morales. "Thank God for him."
Camden Police Inspector Mike Lynch said officers assisted the family yesterday as they fanned out on Camden's streets, handing out fliers and asking residents whether they had seen Lord over the last two weeks.
"The Camden Police Department has been actively assisting the Collingdale Police Department," Lynch said.
Collingdale Police Chief Robert Adams, whose department was criticized by Lord's family in the news media, said the discovery was a "horrible conclusion."
"I'm sorry for the family's loss. They're in my thoughts and prayers," Adams said. "No one deserved to die."
Desiree Caruso, Lord's mother, declined to comment. Vincent Caruso, 66, said he didn't allow his daughter to see Lord's body. Morales, who is married to Desiree Caruso's sister, Frenchie Caruso, said the two women were scouring streets in North Camden when they learned that Morales had found Lord's body.
"[Desiree] and my wife had to go home. It was too much for them. They were breaking down pretty bad," Morales said.
Morales, 38, a construction worker from Philadelphia's Mayfair section, said he was led to Lord's body by a force he can't explain.
"Everybody kept trying to point us in different directions," Morales said. "The second I came to this lot, it was like a very strong feeling. I don't know how to explain it. I walked straight to her. She was on her back. The smell wasn't even that strong. . . . I've been praying. Maybe God led me to this spot."
But Justin Bender, a Montgomery County man who said he took part in yesterday's search, gave a different account. Bender said a man near the empty lot told the search group that he had been with Lord. The man directed them to the lot. Then the man ran away and members of the group went after him. According to Bender, that man was picked up by the police.
Inspector Lynch said no one was arrested or charged during the search.
Bender also said there was a terrible smell near the lot.
"You could smell it, within 10 feet. I was in shock," he said.
Yet residents who live near the lot said they didn't notice any strong odors.
Fay Carter, 55, lives in the occupied house closest to the lot. "There's a lot of drug traffic there," Carter said. "They get high back there. They turn their tricks there."
The vacant lot - sandwiched between a boarded home and a graffiti-marred warehouse - sits near the corner of South 5th Street and Ramona Gonzalez Street, about 10 blocks south of the Walter Rand Transportation Center, where Lord disappeared.
At 4:10 p.m., staff from the Medical Examiner's Office loaded Lord's body, which was strapped to a hospital gurney and wrapped in a silver body bag, into a black county van. Morales and Lord's grandfather watched, grim-faced. They're convinced Lord was attacked by two unidentified men who dumped her body in the lot.
They said there is surveillance footage taken at a Camden PATCO station by cameras operated by the Delaware River Port Authority that shows two men "following" Lord about 9:30 a.m. on July 5.
Additional surveillance footage, however, shows Lord at the PATCO station at 8th and Market streets in Philadelphia about 9:55 a.m. In the footage, Lord meets up with a woman, who appears to hand her a bundle of clothes. Lord then returned to Camden by train and was seen walking toward Broadway with two men, according to police.
Chief Adams said Desiree Caruso and another woman came to the Collingdale Police Station on Saturday, met with a detective, and watched the video. They confirmed it was Lord, Adams said.
Jason Laughlin, spokesman for the Camden County Prosecutor's Office, said his office was working to confirm a cause and manner of death. He said the body was heavily decomposed.
Morales said he refused to believe that Lord went looking for drugs in Camden. For one thing, her body was still clothed in the green and white shirt and green shorts that she disappeared in. There were no other clothes, he said.
"She's not going to come out here to do drugs," Morales said. "She knows Philly really, really good so she didn't have to come to Camden to find drugs, and even at her worse, she never goes without calling."
Lord has a 3-year-old son. Lord's aunt, Frenchie Caruso, said no one had told the boy, Edward, about his mother's death.
"I don't think he knows what death is," she said. "He knows something is wrong, though."
Camden used ta be a pretty decent, working class town. Not no more.
Troll said
12:38 PM, 07/19/10
Philly Tow Truck Driver Shot During Dispute
PHILADELPHIA (CBS 3)
A tow truck operator was shot and wounded by another tow truck driver following a dispute at an accident in Philadelphia Monday morning.
CBS
Philadelphia police are investigating the shooting of a tow truck driver after an accident in the city's Hunting Park section Monday.
Authorities say a dispute between two tow truck operators at the scene of an accident at Whitaker and Hunting Park prompted the shooting at about 10 a.m.
Police say the tow truck operators from competing companies arrived at the scene and allegedly argued over who would service the scene. One of the tow operators allegedly pulled a gun on the other and shot the male in the thigh.
The victim police say, got back into his vehicle and drove himself to the nearby 24th police district at 3901 Whitaker Avenue where he collapsed on the steps of the building.
Police say officers rushed the unidentified male Temple University Hospital for treatment. His condition was not immediately available.
The search is on for the suspect who police described as a "known doer."
Date: 07/19/10 09:35 Philadelphia Help Author: bnsf
I will be in Philadelphia tomorrow and should have 3-4 hours of daylight free time. Whats a good spot to hang out? Will have a rental car. Staying in Bensalem (just north of town). Any info would be great!
Briefly... CITY/REGION
Two shot at rap contest
A 14-year-old girl and a 12-year-old boy were shot and wounded in a drive-by shooting during an impromptu rap contest last night around 9 p.m. in Hunting Park, cops said.
Both shooting victims were taken to Albert Einstein Medical Center where they were listed in stable condition, police said.
As the crowd scattered from the shooting scene on Old York Road near Wingohocking, police had to disperse a crowd of about 1,000 kids at Broad Street and Hunting Park Avenue.
The same large crowd may have trickled down into the Hunting Park Broad Street Line station, cops said, but they were dispersed without incident. A short time later, police received word that the group might converge on South Street but police reported no incidents as of late last night.
Gun buyback program today
The Southwest Philadelphia Community Advisory Group, along with Power99 radio and the city, will host a gun buyback program today at the Myers Recreation Center, 58th and Kingsessing Avenue.
Among the incentives offered for those that turn in weapons are $100 gift cards, Xbox 360s or PlayStation 3s, while supplies last.
Gun task force charges 23
Twenty-three people have been arrested and charged with gun trafficking by the Gun Violence Task Force.
Among those busted are people who filed false paperwork to buy guns and a suspect who allegedly stole 10 guns.
The task force has made 472 arrests and seized 847 firearms since December 2006.
Read more: http://www.philly.com/dailynews/local/20100717_Briefly______CITY_REGION.html#ixzz0twqIcLbX
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Suspect Critical After Police Involved Shooting
PHILADELPHIA (CBS 3)CBS
A teenage suspect remains in the hospital after a police involved shooting in the Frankford section of the city Saturday evening.
Officers were searching for an armed robbery suspect in the area when they spotted a 19-year-old male place a handgun into his waistband.
When police attempted to question the teen, he fled into a lot near Griscom and Wakeling Streets.
"Once inside the vacant lot, the male pulled the handgun from his waistband. Three officers from the 15th District, all in uniform, told the male to drop the gun. The male did not drop the gun," said Chief Inspector Scott Small.
The officers opened fire on the suspect, striking him at least once in the chest. He was rushed to nearby Frankford Hospital in critical condition.
Witnesses reported hearing numerous gunshots, but it is unclear if the suspect discharged his weapon. None of the officers were injured during the incident.
The suspect's 9mm Beretta was recovered at the scene. Investigators are reviewing nearby surveillance cameras.
No clear connection has been made to the suspect and recent robberies in the area or the July 15 shooting of Officer Kevin Livewell in Kensington.
All officers involved are being questioned by Internal Affairs, as per standard procedure following a police involved shooting.
(© MMX, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved.)
Police ID Suspect In Kensington Shootout
PHILADELPHIA (CBS 3)CBS
Related Stories
(7/17/2010)
Anel Cuenas, 27, is believed to have fired a weapon that struck Philadelphia Police Officer Kevin Livewell during a shootout in the 3000 block of N. Water Street.
According to police, Officer Livewell and his partner, from the 24th District, were involved in a shootout after pulling over a van that matched the description of a suspicious vehicle occupied by armed males. As the uniformed officers exited their marked car, at least two suspects immediately opened fire on the officers.
The officers returned fire. During the exchange, Officer Livewell was struck in his right leg below his knee. He was taken to Temple University Hospital where he remains listed in stable condition awaiting surgery.
His partner was not injured and was able to tackle and arrest the driver of the van. Two Hispanic male suspects were able to get away on foot and were last seen fleeing north on Clearfield Street.
Cuenas should be considered armed and dangerous and according to police, may be operating a white Lexus.
If you have any information about the whereabouts of Cuenas or the other suspect, please contact the Philadelphia Police Department at 215-686-3334 or dial 9-1-1.
(© MMX, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved.)
-- Edited by Uke on Sunday 18th of July 2010 11:30:50 PM
Briefly... CITY/REGION
Read more: http://www.philly.com/dailynews/local/20100719_Briefly______CITY_REGION.html#ixzz0u7vs4o5b
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Man shot; mom, child trampled
A man was shot on a SEPTA trolley at 57th Street and Chester Avenue in Kingsessing last night and, in a stampede to get off the trolley, a mother and her 3-year-old child were trampled, police said.
The power line to the trolley was disconnected by someone to disable it, Lt. Frank Vanore said. When the conductor got out of the trolley to reconnect the power, an unknown man boarded and began a confrontation with another passenger.
At some point, a firearm was drawn and one man was shot. During the panic to flee the trolley, the mother and child were trampled, Vanore said. The 3-year-old was taken to Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, where the child's condition was not immediately known.
The shooting victim flagged down police at 58th Street and Kingsessing Avenue and was taken to the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania.
Man charged in shooting
Karim Anthony Brown, 18, of North Philadelphia, has been charged in connection with shooting a 22-year-old man while trying to flee from two plainclothes officers.
The officers tried to question Brown about 12:30 a.m. Saturday on 28th Street near Cumberland, police said. He ran into an alley, and the officers heard a gunshot. The officers caught up with Brown on 27th Street near Albert. That's where they found a man who had been shot in the left arm and right leg. The man identified Brown as the shooter, police said.
No suspects in fatal incident
A 27-year-old man was shot to death on Mutter Street near Dauphin, North Philadelphia, at 11:25 Saturday night. Police did not release his name, pending notification of next of kin. The victim was shot in the head and neck. He was pronounced dead at 12:04 yesterday morning at Temple University Hospital. Police had no suspects or motive.
Suspect shot by police
Carnell Williams, 29, of Lardner Street near Bustleton Avenue, in the Northeast, was shot and wounded critically when he pulled a gun on three police officers Saturday night on Harrison Street near Griscom.
Police said the officers saw the suspect walking on the street with what appeared to be a handgun in his waistband about 7:30 p.m. He fled on foot, and when the officers stopped him in a vacant lot, he pulled out a gun, Lt. Frank Vanore said. Three officers fired their weapons several times. Police said they recovered a 9 mm. weapon.
Charged with murder
Mark Mosley, 27, of Pennsauken, has been charged in the murder of Simere Peoples, 20, also of Pennsauken, the night of April 27 at 32nd and Pelham Streets. Witnesses said they saw the two men arguing before Mosley pulled a gun and shot Peoples.
- Staff and wire reports
Read more: http://www.philly.com/dailynews/local/20100719_Briefly______CITY_REGION.html#ixzz0u7vWiryw
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Tragic conclusion to family's quest
By WENDY RUDERMAN & JASON NARK
Philadelphia Daily News
narkj@phillynews.com 856-779-3231
UNDER A blistering sun, as sweat dripped down his face, Ariel Morales stood among knee-high weeds and empty beer bottles in a vacant Camden lot.
He looked at the badly decomposed, blackened and bloated body. At first, he didn't want to believe it. But the gold hoop earrings, the Mickey Mouse tattoo on the forearm, the flip-flops and ankle bracelet confirmed his deepest fear. It was Jenna. His beautiful auburn-haired niece.
"I was in denial for the first two seconds or first two minutes," Morales said. "I was really hoping it was somebody else."
It was Morales who first found Jenna Lord's body in a drug-infested section of South Camden about 1:30 p.m. yesterday, less than two hours after about 40 of her family and friends set out in Camden to look for the 23-year-old mom from Collingdale, Delaware County.
Lord's family hadn't heard from her since the morning of July 5, when she called home from a train station in downtown Camden. She had spent the July 4 holiday at a family barbecue in Collingswood, N.J., and was headed home, her family said.
Yet surveillance cameras showed Lord getting off the train in Philadelphia, picking up what appeared to be clothes from a woman, then heading back to Camden on the train, according to police.
Almost from the moment she went missing, Lord's family believed she was abducted. They blasted police on both sides of the Delaware River, claiming cops weren't doing enough to find her. Lord's mother, Desiree Caruso, appeared on national television and said police had written her daughter off as a "junkie." Lord once struggled with drug addiction, but had been "clean for months" and found strength from her daily Bible readings, her family said.
Yesterday's grim discovery further fueled her family's fury. They argued that police - not her uncle - should have been the ones to find her.
"Them cops didn't find nothing - not a damn thing. He did," said Lord's grandfather, Vincent Caruso, gesturing toward Morales. "Thank God for him."
Camden Police Inspector Mike Lynch said officers assisted the family yesterday as they fanned out on Camden's streets, handing out fliers and asking residents whether they had seen Lord over the last two weeks.
"The Camden Police Department has been actively assisting the Collingdale Police Department," Lynch said.
Collingdale Police Chief Robert Adams, whose department was criticized by Lord's family in the news media, said the discovery was a "horrible conclusion."
"I'm sorry for the family's loss. They're in my thoughts and prayers," Adams said. "No one deserved to die."
Desiree Caruso, Lord's mother, declined to comment. Vincent Caruso, 66, said he didn't allow his daughter to see Lord's body. Morales, who is married to Desiree Caruso's sister, Frenchie Caruso, said the two women were scouring streets in North Camden when they learned that Morales had found Lord's body.
"[Desiree] and my wife had to go home. It was too much for them. They were breaking down pretty bad," Morales said.
Morales, 38, a construction worker from Philadelphia's Mayfair section, said he was led to Lord's body by a force he can't explain.
"Everybody kept trying to point us in different directions," Morales said. "The second I came to this lot, it was like a very strong feeling. I don't know how to explain it. I walked straight to her. She was on her back. The smell wasn't even that strong. . . . I've been praying. Maybe God led me to this spot."
But Justin Bender, a Montgomery County man who said he took part in yesterday's search, gave a different account. Bender said a man near the empty lot told the search group that he had been with Lord. The man directed them to the lot. Then the man ran away and members of the group went after him. According to Bender, that man was picked up by the police.
Inspector Lynch said no one was arrested or charged during the search.
Bender also said there was a terrible smell near the lot.
"You could smell it, within 10 feet. I was in shock," he said.
Yet residents who live near the lot said they didn't notice any strong odors.
Fay Carter, 55, lives in the occupied house closest to the lot. "There's a lot of drug traffic there," Carter said. "They get high back there. They turn their tricks there."
The vacant lot - sandwiched between a boarded home and a graffiti-marred warehouse - sits near the corner of South 5th Street and Ramona Gonzalez Street, about 10 blocks south of the Walter Rand Transportation Center, where Lord disappeared.
At 4:10 p.m., staff from the Medical Examiner's Office loaded Lord's body, which was strapped to a hospital gurney and wrapped in a silver body bag, into a black county van. Morales and Lord's grandfather watched, grim-faced. They're convinced Lord was attacked by two unidentified men who dumped her body in the lot.
They said there is surveillance footage taken at a Camden PATCO station by cameras operated by the Delaware River Port Authority that shows two men "following" Lord about 9:30 a.m. on July 5.
Additional surveillance footage, however, shows Lord at the PATCO station at 8th and Market streets in Philadelphia about 9:55 a.m. In the footage, Lord meets up with a woman, who appears to hand her a bundle of clothes. Lord then returned to Camden by train and was seen walking toward Broadway with two men, according to police.
Chief Adams said Desiree Caruso and another woman came to the Collingdale Police Station on Saturday, met with a detective, and watched the video. They confirmed it was Lord, Adams said.
Jason Laughlin, spokesman for the Camden County Prosecutor's Office, said his office was working to confirm a cause and manner of death. He said the body was heavily decomposed.
Morales said he refused to believe that Lord went looking for drugs in Camden. For one thing, her body was still clothed in the green and white shirt and green shorts that she disappeared in. There were no other clothes, he said.
"She's not going to come out here to do drugs," Morales said. "She knows Philly really, really good so she didn't have to come to Camden to find drugs, and even at her worse, she never goes without calling."
Lord has a 3-year-old son. Lord's aunt, Frenchie Caruso, said no one had told the boy, Edward, about his mother's death.
"I don't think he knows what death is," she said. "He knows something is wrong, though."
Read more: http://www.philly.com/dailynews/local/20100719_Tragic_conclusion_to_family_s_quest.html#ixzz0u7wlsICT
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Philly Tow Truck Driver Shot During Dispute
PHILADELPHIA (CBS 3)CBS
Authorities say a dispute between two tow truck operators at the scene of an accident at Whitaker and Hunting Park prompted the shooting at about 10 a.m.
Police say the tow truck operators from competing companies arrived at the scene and allegedly argued over who would service the scene. One of the tow operators allegedly pulled a gun on the other and shot the male in the thigh.
The victim police say, got back into his vehicle and drove himself to the nearby 24th police district at 3901 Whitaker Avenue where he collapsed on the steps of the building.
Police say officers rushed the unidentified male Temple University Hospital for treatment. His condition was not immediately available.
The search is on for the suspect who police described as a "known doer."
(© MMX, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved.)
Philadelphia Help
Author: bnsf
Thanks
Grady