NEW YORK — Jeffrey Johnson hid behind a car in his business suit and tie near the Empire State Building, waiting for the man he blamed for costing him his job. He put a gun to the executive’s head and fired five times, then walked off with his briefcase into the morning rush of midtown Manhattan.

Minutes later, Johnson was dead in front of the landmark skyscraper, killed by police Friday in a chaotic confrontation that sent bullets ricocheting, wounded nine other people and left sidewalks near one of the world’s best-known landmarks spattered with blood.

Police released dramatic surveillance video that showed the confrontation lasted only a few seconds. Johnson was walking rapidly down the street trailed by two police officers when he stopped, wheeled around and pulled out a gun.

About a dozen people ran for their lives, including two small children who were just feet away from Johnson. He pointed the gun at the officers, who quickly fired at him.

Johnson dropped his briefcase, fell to his knees and then collapsed on the ground.

The bystanders likely were hit by police officers’ stray gunfire, some of it bullets that rebounded off planters in front of the skyscraper and grazed pedestrians.

The two officers fired 16 shots. The surveillance video shows Johnson pointing his weapon at police, but it’s likely he did not get a chance to fire, investigators said.

Startled New Yorkers looked up from their morning routines in the crowded business district to see people sprawled in the streets bleeding and a tarp covering the body in front of the tourist landmark.

“I was on the bus and people were yelling ‘get down, get down,” said accountant Marc Engel. “I was thinking, ‘You people are crazy, no one is shooting in the middle of midtown Manhattan at 9 o’clock in the morning.”

It was over in seconds, he said — “a lot of pop, pop, pop, pop, one shot after the other.” Afterward he saw sidewalks littered with the wounded, including one man “dripping enough blood to leave a stream.”

Johnson, who neighbors had seen leave his apartment in a suit every day since he was laid off a year ago, had worked for six years for Hazan Imports and was let go when the company downsized, police Commissioner Ray Kelly said.

Police were looking into his relationship with the victim, Steven Ercolino, the company’s vice president of sales, who had traded accusations of harassment with Johnson when he worked there. Johnson, 58, also blamed Ercolino for his layoff, saying that he hadn’t aggressively marketed Johnson’s new T-shirt line, police spokesman Paul Browne said.

After waiting for Ercolino, 41, to come to work, Johnson walked up to him, pulled out a .45-caliber pistol and fired at his head, Kelly said. After he fell to the ground, Johnson stood over him and shot four more times, a witness told investigators.

“Jeffrey just came from behind two cars, pulled out his gun, put it up to Steve’s head and shot him,” said Carol Timan, whose daughter, Irene, was walking to Hazan Imports at the time with Ercolino.

A construction worker who saw the shooting followed Johnson and alerted two police officers, a detail regularly assigned to patrol city landmarks such as the 1,454-foot skyscraper since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, officials said.

Kelly said the officers who caught up to Johnson had “a gun right in their face” and “responded quickly, and they responded appropriately.”

“These officers, having looked at the tape myself, had absolutely no choice,” Kelly said.

A witness had told police that Johnson fired at the officers, but authorities say ballistics evidence doesn’t support that. Johnson’s weapon held seven rounds, they said. He fired five times at Ercolino, one round was still in the gun and one was ejected when officers secured it, authorities said.

Another loaded magazine was found in Johnson’s briefcase.

Johnson legally bought the gun in Sarasota, Fla., in 1991, but he didn’t have a required permit to possess the weapon in New York City, police said.

“New York City, as you know, is the safest big city in the country, and we are on pace to have a record low number of murders this year,” Mayor Michael Bloomberg said. “But we are not immune to the national problem of gun violence,” he said of the shooting, following mass shootings a Colorado movie theater and a Sikh temple in Wisconsin.

Robert Asika, who was shot in the right arm, said he was “100 percent positive” that a police officer had shot him. Asika, 23, sells tickets for the Empire State Building’s observatory.

“When I woke up this morning, I didn’t even want to go to work,” he said. “Something told me not to go to work.”

The wounded victims were five women and four men, authorities said. All were from New York City, except a woman from Chapel Hill, N.C. They suffered graze wounds or other minor injuries.

Police said six of them were treated at a hospital and were released by Friday night. The three others were being treated for injuries that were not life-threatening.

Ercolino’s profile on the business networking site LinkedIn identified him as a vice president of sales at Hazan Import. It said he was a graduate of the State University of New York at Oneonta.

He had recently moved to New Jersey after living for a time in Warwick, just north of New York City, said his eldest brother, Paul Ercolino. He grew up in Nanuet.

“He was in the prime of his life,” Paul Ercolino said.

His brother was a gregarious salesman — known to nieces and nephews as Uncle Ducky because of his nearly blond hair — who had followed his father into the garment industry, then later worked in women’s handbags and accessories.

He never mentioned to the family that he had any problems with a co-worker, Paul Ercolino said.

Hazan Import Corp. imports women’s clothing and accessories, according to public records. Calls to its executives weren’t immediately returned

Even after he was laid off, Johnson would leave his Upper East Side apartment building each morning in a suit, and often returned about a half hour later after going to get breakfast at McDonald’s, his neighbors said.

“He was always alone,” said Gisela Casella, who lived a few floors above him. “I always felt bad. I said, ‘Doesn’t he have a girlfriend?’ I never saw him with anybody.”

Internet records list him as administrator of the website for a business called St. Jolly’s Art, which sold iron-on art for T-shirts, including stylized drawings of fighter planes, muscle cars and ships.

Johnson was also part of a community of bird watchers and photographers who document hawks and other wildlife living in Central Park, a few blocks from his home. In an email to another bird watcher, who works at The Associated Press, Johnson wrote tenderly about spending a winter night watching ducks in the park.

“Near midnight by the Harlem Meer I watched a little ‘flotilla’ of Mallards swimming and softly honking …fifteen degree temp and they were carrying on unfazed. Just remarkable,” he wrote.

Gunshots so close to one of the city’s leading tourist attractions immediately prompted fears of terrorism, but federal officials said that wasn’t the case, and a guard at the skyscraper said it didn’t involve the parts of the building where tourists gather to visit the skyscraper.

Metal detectors and bag searchers have been standard at the 102-story skyscraper since 1997, when a gunman opened fire on the 86th floor observation deck of the Empire State Building, killing one tourist and wounding six others before fatally shooting himself.

The skyscraper remained open Friday throughout the mayhem, although the tourist attraction’s workers became witnesses.

“We were just working here and we just heard bang, bang, bang!” said Mohammed Bachchu, a worker at a nearby souvenir shop.

He said he rushed from the building and saw seven people lying on the ground, covered in blood.

Queens resident Rebecca Fox said she saw people running down the street and initially thought it was a celebrity sighting but then saw a woman shot in the foot and a man dead on the ground.

“I was scared and shocked and literally shaking,” she said.

She said police seemed to appear in seconds.

“It was like ‘CSI,’” she said, “but it was real.”

___

Contributing to this report from New York were Alex Katz, Samantha Gross, Julie Walker, David B. Caruso, Adam Geller, Karen Matthews, Ula Ilnytzky, Anne D’Innocenzio and Meghan Barr.

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63 Comments

  1. If it truly did grow out of a workplace dispute, all I can say is that if you have to prove your point with a gun, it was probably not a very good point to begin with.

  2. People are Freakin’ crazy.  What ever happened to resolving your differences with healthy debate, or agreeing to disagree?  Instead, you kill/injure innocent victims?

    1. We already have some kind of gun control. We actually have lots of gun control.

      But until we have crazy control, people will still get killed.

      1. Love this comment, didn’t want to just “like” it.  We can control everything to death, outlaw guns, knives, rope, gasoline or another item used to kill people…….people will still kill people, there seems to be no way to to control the crazies……what is changing within the human brain that makes people so mentally unstable and violent.  No self control, the incredible need for revenge, the list goes on and on…..I just don’t understand it:(

        1. you’re right, those leaders never uttered those words.
          but, every single one of them enacted draconian gun control measures just before committing genocide against their own people.

          1. Actually you are wrong. 

            Hitler relaxed gun control for German citizens and increase restrictions on “undesirables”, the Soviet Union always had strict gun control long before Stalin took over from Lenin and the Chinese never had a strong gun culture (still don’t today) nor the wealth for alot of Chinese citizens to own guns.

            Even if German, Soviet and Chinese citizens had had access to guns, they would not have had much chance to stand up to their respective governments.  Neither would American citizens be able to do that with today’s sophisticated military establishment.

          2.  Perhaps not, but American’s would try to resist. Of course, they government is worried about that, so they will continually either create tragedy or use it to their advantage to continue their quest to de-arm every citizen of this country.

    2. Killing is part of the human condition. If somebody really wants to kill someone, they will find a way. Doesn’t matter if it’s a gun, knife,bomb, poison, etc. Controlling the most common method will not get rid of the method of killing sadly.

      1. Sorry, but some societies do far better at keeping crime low.  And our society is a dismally poor example of way too much gun violence.  Plenty of other democratic countries do a far better job because, for one thing, their gun laws are not so lax.

        1. Norway and Switzerland have high ownership yet are some of the most peaceful. 

          Australia, since enacting its gun control laws in ’96 has seen armed robberies increase 51%, unarmed robberies by 37%, assults by 24% and kidnappings by 43%. Murders did fall 3% but manslaughter rose 16%

          The murder rate is higher in USA than England, but, according to a DoJ study, the gap has narrowed over the past 16 years (their bans were enacted in ’97). The UN confirmed in 2000 that the crime rate was higher in the UK than in 16 other industrial nations (US included)

          If you really want to ban something, ban swimming pools. Drowning accounts for far more deaths (especially in children). Despite some claiming they do it for “fun”, swimming is an archaic practice that is a throwback to when we had to do it to catch food and traverse the land. By owning a pool for your own amusement and not keeping it locked up, you are putting your family and your neighbors at risk.

          1. Although Switzerland has a high rate of gun ownership, only police and other similar officials are allowed to carry weapons.  Similarly, there is a total ban on automatic weapons in Norway and all weapons must be registered.  All of this information is available via wikipedia.  As for crime rates increasing in Australia, please see 
            http://www.snopes.com/crime/statistics/ausguns.asp.

        2. I’m not saying I disagree, just that people will find a way to kill whether there is gun control or not.

    3.  We have all the gun control we need. Probably more than we need. If a person wants to kill someone there are many ways to do that, knife, baseball bat, tire iron, hammer, wire loop, bare hands the list goes on, are you in favor of restricting all of those?  More firearm restrictions will not stop this type of violence and anyone is a fool that believes so.

    4. Some really unpleasant people took down two very large buildings in the same city without firing a shot.Bad guys always find a way. Further rational gun control might help in certain situations, but it won’t stop people like this guy-it just won’t. 

    5. One man shooting one person and then two cops shooting 8 bystanders says we do need gun control, on the police.

      1. Exactly this. It was not another “mass shooting”. It was an assassination, or at least that was the intent.

  3. Another prime example of how gun control is a massive failure.  This man was not allowed by law to carry a gun where this happened, and niether were his victims.  Gun control doesn’t stop violent crime.  If anything it impairs the law-abiding public’s ability to defend themselves.

      1. Now, now, we all know if you ban guns no one will EVER get killed again. Murder will stop and everything will be peaceful.

        1. The bodies are still warm and you’re screeching like people are coming after your guns. Just calm down and have some tact before running your mouth off.

          1. Me have tact? Every time any crime is committed that involves a gun the first comments are people screeching for gun control.  You say I have no tact? You sir, have no tact.

          2. You brought it up preemptively! You screamed that people were trying to take away guns before anyone even did mention gun control. So yeah, you don’t have tact and your litte “I know you are, but what am I?” routine is pathetic. 

            We can’t even have a conversation about guns without people like you screaming that your guns are being taken away from you. Somehow you turn the mass murder of people in something about YOU. That is tactless and shameful. 

    1. You’re insane.  The report already indicates that police bullets might have killed some of the bystanders.  Imagine if a bunch of citizens with concealed Glocks whipped out their guns and started firing.  It would be total chaos and lots of killing.

      What we need is gun control, but there’s no way the right wing is going to allow it, even though the mass murder killing sprees are starting to happen all the time, thanks to our culture of extreme glorification of violence and super easy access to guns.

      1. Guns are 100% illegal where this occurred for those other than police. HOW MUCH MORE GUN CONTROL WOULD YOU LIKE?

          1. I’m just following the logic of Rizzz. He/she implies it’s a waste to criminalize guns, so following that logic, it’s a waste to criminalize murder — people will do it regardless.

        1. And the gun most likely came from a jurisdiction with little or no gun control.  What’s your point?

  4. It seems like something like this is starting to happen every week. We need to have a discussion and change things.

  5. “Everybody was crowded around him taking pictures and video”

    not sure which is more disturbing…this….or the story itself……

    I don’t care what you say….gun control is not the answer…..might deter events like this a little….but a disturbed individual is going to find a way to hurt people…whether it’s by gun or something else……the internet makes it too easy for people to construct virtually anything they want……just need to be on full alert all the time I guess…welcome to the new age

  6. I don’t see lots of gun control.  I see easy access to semi-automatic assault rifles and glock hand guns with 30 round clips, and I see more and more shootings all the time in our culture of violence and gun-worship. 

    Pretty soon drunk Texans will be walking around in bars with legally concealed guns.  Whoopee.

    1. If you want “semi-automatic rifles and glock hand guns with 30 round clips (sic)” to be less accessible tell Eric Holder not to give them to the drug cartels.  And they are “magazines”, not “clips”.

  7. People were crowded around a bleeding man taking pictures and video, emergency personal had to yell at them to get back……….my heart breaks for society

  8. crackalacka, drugs are illegal yet they still manage to obtain massive quantities of those, what makes you think if all guns were illegal they still wouldn’t be able to get them? the answer is they would… you can’t predict or control crazy. which is what these shooters are…. blame the mind not the weapon….

  9. and i’m unclear on NYC  but for those screaming gun control, aren’t they already illegal there? hmmm……

    1. All I see are pro-gun people screaming that others are screaming about gun control. Seems paranoid and pre-emptive to me.

  10. People are running amuck out there and the problem is we’re getting used to it. Things like this used to be rare. But it seems the incidents are occurring more frequently. We’ll know were in trouble when a mass shooting only makes local news because it’s just another day in the life of a city.

    1. it still is rare. Violent crimes are still dropping drastically. The issue is accessibility of instant information creating a false perception.

      1. unless you’re in chicago. their murder rate has skyrocketed.
        then again, their gun control measures are the most draconian and strict in the whole nation.

        1.  Go figure, right? People still fail to make the correlation. Just like drug laws. MAKE THEM TOUGHER! they scream, but what they actually are screaming is: MAKE DRUGS MORE VALUABLE .

  11. A great advertisement for our country and its pathetic lack of control over the sales of fire-arms. Come visit the Empire State Building and experience a High Noon style shoot out at the same time. One doesn’t have to be anti-gun to think that our nation should have a much better handle on who gets to buy, sell or use guns. Hunting is fine and so is self-protection or a concealed weapon permit but let’s at the very least make sure that the people selling guns are legitimate dealers and that the buyers have no criminal or mental illness records. Let’s  make ownership of military style  weapons subject to gun-club membership (no government registration) so there is at least a basic filter to weed out some of the sociopaths who have been making headlines  lately. It is a given that many  NRA-members will oppose any such common sense measures but there is no reason the rest of us have to accept their stance as gospel.

    1. This man needed only one bullet to commit his crime. it could have easily been done with a “hunting” gun. 

      And what does “military style” even mean. My autoloader 30-06 hunting rifle shoots far larger rounds than common “assault rifles” the addition of a telescoping stock and pistol grip would be trivially simple. Expanded magazines? The magazine is again one of the simplest mechanisms in a firearm. Anyone with half a brain could modify a larger one. People (see: politicians) who try to draw a line do so arbitrarily. There is no data to support these laws and to ignore the available data makes a person no better than a climate change skeptic or holocaust denier.

  12. Head line should read Man kills coworker; Cops shoot 8 bystanders

    How about gun control? It is already almost impossible to legally own a pistol in New York City. 

  13. Love it how they call it a mass shooting, but then go on to admit that most of the injuries were likely sustained from bullets fired by police…

  14. I’ve never been to New York and dont care to.Boston alone is enough to satisfy my urge. Ive been out of country and traveled to other states. I think we have enough drama going on right here in penobscot county. I could care less whats happening at the Big Apple.

  15. Rational people do not use guns to settle their differences. But the problem is that way too many irrational, unstable individuals who get their hands on guns.

  16. I say enforce the laws already on the books…More extreme measures won’t help.  You can ban all weapons then what???  Arson, pummle with stones, good old hanging??
    If you don’t want a gun don’t get one plain and simple.
    If you want to ban anything/ban the murders and drug dealers ( OH wait there already illegal)
    I want that option to take matters into my own hands at 1am in my own house when that special someone that shouldn’thave the gun enters without knocking(Breaking in to you liberals that aren’t quite following)  I respect guns and teach the knowledge to youngsters I may meet while hunting and shooting.
    The only control one needs is breathing while pulling the trigger!!

  17. Ill-trained police officers who become hysterical in a crisis are a menace in their own right. The gunman used five bullets on his victim. After police shot him dead and in the process wounded nine (!) innocent bystanders, news reports say investigators ejected one cartridge from his gun and determined there was an additional round in the clip. The weapon involved was reported to be a seven-shot model. Do the math and when the police start shooting remember to hit the ground and pray.

  18. It is really sad that two people died and nine others hurt. What else is really sad is it took two cops ,16 shots, to take this guy down. He wasn’t even a moving target. It should have only taken ONE shot to take him out. I hate to say it, but it sounds like to me that the Police force need to go  back for crisis management training and spend their free time on the shooting range.

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