Brooklyn Boro

Baltimore man convicted of attempted murder, other charges for shooting three in Bedford-Stuyvesant

Defendant Faces up to 75 Years in State Prison at Sentencing

April 26, 2016 Brooklyn Daily Eagle
Cush Wright-El. Photo courtesy of the Brooklyn DA’s Office
Share this:

Brooklyn District Attorney Ken Thompson on Monday announced that a 27-year-old man was convicted of attempted murder and other charges for opening fire on a Bedford-Stuyvesant street, striking three people. He faces up to 75 years in state prison when he is sentenced.
 
“This defendant brazenly pulled out a handgun and fired nine times on a street filled with people going about their business,” said Thompson. “He struck three people, all of whom are lucky to be alive. Now he’s been held accountable and faces many years in prison.”
 
The DA identified the defendant as Cush Wright-El, 27, of Baltimore, Maryland. He was convicted of one count of second-degree attempted murder, two counts of first-degree assault, second-degree criminal possession of a weapon and first-degree reckless endangerment following a jury trial before Brooklyn Supreme Court Justice Suzanne Mondo. He will be sentenced on May 10, at which time he faces a maximum of up to 75 years in prison.
 
Thompson said that, according to trial testimony, on Oct. 1, 2014, at approximately 5:45 p.m., in the vicinity of Pulaski Street and Stuyvesant Avenue, Wright-El, dressed in a dark hooded sweatshirt, approached William Mayo, 57, and his nephew Kayshawn Mayo, 16, as they played a game of chess, and opened fire, striking the older man in the ankle and the teenager in the shoulder and back, and grazing his head.
 
Furthermore, according to trial testimony, Wright-El then ran down the street and continued firing, striking bystander Judith Daniel, 61, in the right leg, foot and left calf. Another of William Mayo’s nephews, Demetrious Mayo, 28, got into his car and followed Wright-El, allegedly ramming into him. Wright-El was arrested and a .40 caliber weapon was recovered in a hooded jacket. Nine shell casings were recovered at the scene of the shooting.
 
The case was prosecuted by ADA Timothy Gough, chief of the DA’s Grey Zone Trial Bureau, with the assistance of ADA Krystyn Tendy, also of the Grey Zone.
 

—Information from the Brooklyn DA’s Office

 


Leave a Comment


Leave a Comment