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Boy, 16, shot to death by 2 gunmen on Razor scooters in Harlem

A 16-year-old boy was shot to death on a Harlem street corner by a pair of gunmen on Razor scooters early Thursday, cops said.
Clarence Jones was shot in the torso near W. 124th St. and Lenox Ave. about 1:30 a.m., cops said. Medics rushed the teen to Harlem Hospital but he couldn’t be saved.
The boy was about nine blocks from home when he was shot, according to cops.
“We don’t know what happened. We don’t know about target. We know somebody killed our nephew. They just took his life senselessly. He was only 16,” said Desiree Murphy, 59, who identified herself as a paternal aunt to the building and who lives in close-knit apartment building where Clarence lived with his father.
Police have yet to establish a motive for the killing but the victim was on probation for a case involving at least one robbery in which it’s believed he displayed a gun. He had numerous other prior arrests.
Clarence’s paternal aunt said the teen had gotten caught up with a bad crowd but had goals for a different life.
“He was a good kid,” said Murphy. “Kids get into stuff. Kids do stuff. But overall he was a sweetheart.”
“His plan was to go to school, do the right thing and make a life for himself,” she added. “He wanted to go to school, do good and make something of himself. [His life] was cut short.”
A stray bullet blasted through the window of a passing Toyota Camry, hitting the 51-year-old livery driver’s headrest.
The driver continued to W. 116th St., where he called police. He suffered an ear injury but it wasn’t clear if he was grazed by the stray slug, struck by breaking glass or hurt some other way as he dodged the bullet. The driver was treated at Mount Sinai West.
The two shooters, wearing black Nike hoodies and gray pants, fled west on W. 124th St. on Razor scooters and have not been caught. Three shell casings were recovered from the scene.
Another neighbor who identified herself as an aunt said Clarence was more like her son.
“It’s unbelievable. It’s heartbreaking. It’s just too much as a parent. Nobody ever wants to get that phone call. No parent should have to bury their child,” said Tenille House, 48. “Anytime your phone rings at 1, 2, 3 in the morning it’s never good news.”
Alicia Cox, another neighbor who identified herself as an aunt, said the building was devastated.
“It’s senseless and the gun violence has to stop,” Cox said. “As a building, as a block, we’re all very united. We as tenants, we all look out for each other. And then this bogus mayor that says crime is down, there is no crime, the gun violence is so low. But it’s constantly happening over and over and over again and we’re sick. I’m sick of seeing mothers cry over their dead children.”

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