Camrin Williams, who is also known by the rap name C Blu, posted his $250,000 bond after being locked up at a Brooklyn juvenile facility on gun and assault charges in the shooting of a 27-year-old cop in Belmont.
"If
anybody wants to know why we have a crisis of violence in this city, or
why we’re about to bury two hero police officers, look no further than
this disgraceful bail release," NYPD Police Benevolent Association
President Patrick Lynch said in a statement.
"This individual
chose to carry illegal guns twice," Lynch said. "He chose to fight with
and shoot a New York City police officer. There’s no reason to believe
he won’t do the exact same thing when he’s out on the street tonight.
"Shame
on Judge Denis Boyle for allowing this to happen," he said. "The people
of the Bronx won’t be safe as long as he’s on the bench."
Boyle, a
Bronx Supreme Court justice, has come under fire in the past amid
claims that he’s overly lenient, particularly with young defendants.
In a statement Thursday, state court officials said that anger is misdirected.
"The
ire that the PBA president is projecting on the judge, who is following
the law, should be directed at the individuals who promulgate those
laws," Lucian Chalfen, spokesman for the state Office of Court
Administration, said in an email.
NYPD officer Kaseem Pennan was shot by Camrin Williams,16, during a clash with police.
(Twitter/@NYPD48Pct)
State
lawmakers have also come under fire after passing prohibitive bail
reform measures that bar judges from setting bail on misdemeanors and
non-violent felonies.
Williams was eligible for bail in his case.
He
walked out of the Crossroads Juvenile Center in Brooklyn shortly before
7 p.m. but declined to comment to a reporter from The Post.
But in a statement, his attorney, Dawn Florio, said her client will focus on his music.
"Camrin
has been released and will be back to his regular productive life of
focusing on schoolwork and his music career," Florio said.
FILE - A New York City Police Department officer lights a candle
at a makeshift memorial outside the NYPD's 32nd Precinct, near the scene
of a shooting that claim the lives of NYPD officers Jason Rivera and
Wilbert Mora in the Harlem neighborhood of New York, Monday Jan. 24,
2022. (AP Photo/Yuki Iwamura, File)
Police said Williams was arrested after cops
from the 48th Precinct responded to reports of an unruly crowd at
Lorillard Place near East 187th Street on Jan. 18.
Williams refused to take his hands out of his pockets and got into a scuffle with cops.
During
the struggle, a gun he was holding went off, with a single bullet
striking and wounding NYPD officer Kaseem Pennant and hitting the
teenager in the groin.
Williams already had a 2020 gun possession
arrest on his record and was placed on probation as a juvenile in the
case just one month earlier.
Police officers stand in line outside St. Patricks Cathedral to
pay their respects during the wake of New York City Police Officer Jason
Rivera, Thursday, Jan. 27, 2022, in New York. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer)
(AP Photo/Mary Altaffer)
Bronx prosecutors asked that the teen be held without bail at his arrangement last week, but Boyle set bond at $250,000.
Wiliams,
who was being held at the Crossroads Juvenile Center in Brooklyn,
reportedly planned to use an advance on his contract with Interscope
Records to post the $15,000 in cash needed to secure the bond.
https://www.foxnews.com/us/nyc-teen-rapper-charged-shooting-nypd-cop-walking-free-bond