A 15-year-old went to a Brooklyn parade. The NYPD wrongly accused him of
a mass shooting
Send a link to a friend
[February 08, 2025]
By JAKE OFFENHARTZ
NEW YORK (AP) — Camden Lee was leaving high school football practice in
September when he saw the photograph, splashed across the New York
Police Department’s social media accounts, that would soon upend his
life.
In a crisp surveillance image, the 15-year-old stands alone in a hoodie
and shorts, eyes cast down on a Brooklyn street. “The pictured
individual,” police declared in an accompanying caption, had “discharged
a firearm” at the West Indian American Day parade, killing one person
and wounding four others.
“I see the NYPD logo. I see me. I see ‘suspect wanted for murder,’” Lee
recalled. “I couldn’t believe what was happening. Then everything went
blurry.”
In private, police backpedaled almost immediately. After meeting with
Lee and his lawyer, they declined to bring charges, then quietly removed
his photograph from their X and Instagram accounts. But they have not
publicly acknowledged the retraction, ignoring the repeated pleas of Lee
and his mother, who say their lives remain threatened by the falsehood.

The family’s search for answers has raised questions about the NYPD’s
policies for correcting misinformation at a time when the department is
already facing scrutiny for other social media misrepresentations.
“I used to have a lot of trust in the NYPD and how they do things,” said
Lee’s mother, Chee Chee Brock, whose older son recently joined the
force. “But I raised my kids to admit when they made a mistake. If you
can blame an innocent kid for murder, what else can you get away with?”
The department’s newly appointed chief spokesperson, Deputy Commissioner
for Public Information Delaney Kempner, said she would look into the
matter but did not answer a list of questions or provide further
information.
It remains unclear why Lee was identified as a suspect.
The day of the shooting, Lee said, he left football practice and stopped
at the annual Labor Day celebration of Caribbean culture with a teammate
at around 1 p.m. Minutes later, as gunfire erupted along the route, his
friend was grazed in the shoulder. The surveillance image, Lee said,
showed his stunned expression after hearing gunshots for the first time,
then watching his bloodied friend carted away on a stretcher.
When police published it, on Sept. 19, Lee's mother immediately
contacted an attorney, Kenneth Montgomery, who offered to set up a
meeting with homicide detectives that night. But police told the lawyer
to bring the teen to Brooklyn’s 77th precinct station the following
week. At the meeting — according to Montgomery, Lee and his mother — the
detectives said he was not a suspect.
“They conceded they got it wrong,” Montgomery said. “But these officers
were so cavalier about it. It was like they were playing a game with a
kid’s life.”
By then the NYPD’s communications division had widely distributed the
photograph of Lee to media outlets and TV stations, which urged people
to come forward with tips about the unnamed suspect.
In recent weeks a high-ranking department official has urged some
outlets not to use the image in follow-up stories about the shooting,
according to text messages shared with The Associated Press. But those
conversations with reporters were “off the record,” preventing news
sites from explaining why the photograph was removed.
In the absence of official clarification, the photo has continued to
circulate online, triggering a barrage of death threats against Lee from
online sleuths who tracked down his own social media accounts.

[to top of second column]
|

As he got ready for school on a recent morning, Lee pulled up an
Instagram page with 750,000 followers and scrolled through the
comments below his photograph.
“He about to get found quick,” one read. Another said simply: “He
done.” Others tagged friends and family of Denzel Chan, 25, who was
killed in the shooting. “They deserve answers too,” Lee said of
Chan's loved ones.
At a news conference immediately following the shooting, NYPD Chief
of Patrol John Chell said the violence was gang-related. He
described the suspect as a slim man in his 20s who wore a
paint-stained brown shirt and bandana. Lee, who turned 16 in
January, wore neither in the photograph released weeks later.
Fearing possible gang retaliation, Brock, a single mother who works
at the post office, moved her son and two daughters to a relative’s
home outside the city. Lee missed weeks of school, hurting his
grades, as evidenced by a report card hanging on the fridge. While
the family has since returned to Brooklyn, Lee has been forbidden by
his mother from moving around alone.
“As a mom, the No. 1 thing I’m scared of is losing my kids to the
streets or the jail system,” said Brock. “So he doesn’t have freedom
now. When he goes to the corner store, I time him.”
It has not escaped the family’s attention that the mistaken
identification came at a uniquely tumultuous time for city police.
In the 17 days between the shooting and the release of the photo,
federal agents seized phones from Police Commissioner Edward Caban,
who then resigned, telling officers that the investigation “created
a distraction for the department.”
“There’s tremendous pressure on the NYPD to serve up results in a
high-profile shooting like this,” said Wylie Stecklow, a civil
rights attorney who is representing the family as they weigh a
possible lawsuit. “The fact that they’ve failed to explain how this
mistake was made, and how they’ll avoid it in the future, is deeply
troubling.”
As the department seeks to rehabilitate its image, its
communications strategy has also come under fire. A recent report
from the city’s Department of Investigation faulted certain NYPD
executives for “irresponsible and unprofessional” use of social
media and called on the department to codify its policies around
deleting public posts, as other city agencies have done.
In an earlier social media post, Chell, who has since been promoted
to chief of department, mistakenly identified a judge he accused of
letting a predator back into the community. That post, too, was
deleted.

In December, just when the initial wave of attention around Lee
began to subside, police announced they were upping the reward for
information about the shooting to $10,000. This time they did not
circulate Lee's photo.
But without official confirmation that Lee was no longer a suspect,
many news stations and newspapers ran the old image of him anyway.
It remains all over the internet, including atop some news stories.
“For the photo to come out again, it brought it all back to the
start,” Lee said. “My mom was just thinking of letting me go on the
train again.”
Lately, he said, he can sense people looking at him, whispering
behind back, as he walks through his neighborhood or the hallways at
school. He has considered cutting his hair or buying new clothes in
the hopes of passing unrecognized. Some days he prefers not to leave
home at all.
“It takes me to a dark place,” Lee said. “I don’t feel like myself
anymore. I don’t have the opportunity to explain my side of the
story. Everyone is so fixed on this one image of me: murderer.”
All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved |