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Thursday
Nov042004
Thursday, November 4, 2004 at 03:13PM
Last week we called into question the NYPD's
decision to declare the shooting of 18-year-old Queens deli clerk
Manuel Chametta a "freak accident" and leave it at that. Chametta, as
you probably remember, was shot and killed by retired police officer
John Malik, who claims he was reaching for his beeper, knocked his gun
loose and, when reaching to recover it, accidentally fired one bullet
into Chametta's chest. That he wasn't taken into custody as a simple
matter of procedure afterwards, and that there was no serious
investigation planned into the shooting struck us as awfully peculiar
at best. Again, not to imply guilt or intent on his part, but had this
happened to any civilian, he or she would have been arrested and an
investigation would have followed--no matter how clear-cut things
seemed. And this case was far from clear-cut. It seems a few more
people came to that conclusion last week, too. Chametta's father grew
more adamant about the peculiarities of the case, with both Malik's and
almost-witness Felipe Santiago Villares' stories changing, and a city
councilman demanded that the Queens DA's office arrest Malik and
conduct a real investigation. Yet for all the coverage, all the calls for this and that,
all the arguments from both sides, it seems strange that still no one
has even mentioned the deli's security cameras. The shooting took place
at the front counter. Any security cameras in the shop would have been
pointed at the front counter. The tape from that evening would quickly
and clearly resolve this whole issue once and for all--so why isn't it
being done? Or is the Astoria Food Mart the only deli in the city that
doesn't have security cameras? [more]
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