De Blasio reacts to 'heartbreaking' shooting of 1-year-old: 'This is not anything we can allow in our city'

Davell Gardner's 'life was full of possibilities', NYC's mayor says

New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio vowed Monday that the “heartbreaking” shooting death of a 1-year-old at a family cookout over the weekend is “not anything we can allow in our city.”

The tragic death of Davell Gardner in Brooklyn on Sunday night comes as the Big Apple has been grappling with a rise in violence in recent weeks.

This weekend alone, there were 28 shooting incidents and 35 victims across the city’s five boroughs, compared to just five incidents and six victims during the same Friday-to-Sunday period last year, the New York Police Department tells Fox News.

“To wake up this morning and learn that a 1-year-old child was killed on the streets of our city by gunfire is just so painful,” De Blasio told reporters Monday, before holding a moment of silence for Davell. “It’s not acceptable, it’s not something we can ever look away from. It’s something we have to address and stop and it's just horrifying.”

ONE-YEAR-OLD KILLED, 3 OTHERS SHOT AT COOKOUT IN NEW YORK CITY, POLICE SAY 

De Blasio described Davell as “just starting his life and his life was full of possibilities and now he is gone.”

“This is not anything we can allow in our city,” the mayor said. “And it’s heartbreaking. It’s heartbreaking for so many reasons and it begins with the fact that there is just so many guns out there and that is a New York tragedy and a national tragedy.”

Investigators say Davell Gardner died at a local hospital after suffering a gunshot wound to the stomach at a family cookout.

Gardner and three other adult male victims were struck after two men walked up to the sidewalk gathering in Brooklyn just before midnight and started shooting from across Raymond Bush Park, according to police.

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Their motive is unclear at this time – and as of late Monday morning, no arrests have been made.

“We mourn alongside the family of one-year-old Davell Gardner killed senselessly last night in Bed-Stuy,” the borough’s president, Eric Adams, wrote in a tweet. “Our hearts break for the lost opportunity of this innocent baby.”

“When we say ‘Black Lives Matter,’ we include our children,” Adams added. “Davell’s life mattered.”

New York City has seen a surge in violence in recent weeks, following the city council's vote that included $837 million in budget cuts and funding reallocations involving its police department.

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The NYPD says the surge in violence is attributed to early COVID-19 releases from city jails and recent police reform. Last Monday, de Blasio pointed the blame on the court system and economy amid the coronavirus pandemic.

From the beginning of the year through July 4, there were 530 shootings in New York City. There were 350 shootings during the same time period last year, police said.

There haven't been this many shootings in New York City since 1996, Fox 5 New York adds.

As for Davell’s death, De Blasio said “you can never look away from something like this and be numb to it.

“Because it just goes against everything we believe as New Yorkers, we can’t let this happen in our city,” he added.

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When asked by a reporter Monday about gun seizures, De Blasio said “over the years, really, really powerful efforts to get guns off the streets”

“Our officers know that it’s preeminent to get guns off the streets and we have to do it in smart ways. And a lot of the things that work best is making community members allies in that effort because a lot of times they have the information that is the single best way to get the guns off the streets," he added. "So it's constantly going to be a focus. We are going to do more. We have to keep making adjustments, we are not going to live this way.”

Fox News’ David Aaro and Courtney Crawford contributed to this report. 

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