Teenager shot in face with pellet gun
Marisa O’Neil
Police are looking for the person who shot a 17-year-old boy in the
face with a pellet gun on Friday as he rode his bicycle near Cliff
Drive Park.
The Costa Mesa resident was riding his bicycle east on Riverside
Drive near Cliff Drive at about 5 p.m. when someone fired shots at
him, police said. One of the metal pellets lodged in his cheek and
was later removed at Hoag Hospital, Newport Beach Sgt. Steve Shulman
said.
The boy, whose name was not released, is recovering and in good
condition, Shulman said. Whoever shot him faces a charge of felony
assault with a deadly weapon.
“Right now, we believe it’s an isolated incident,” Shulman said.
No suspects are in custody, and police have no description of the
shooter or shooters who “sniped at” the boy, Shulman said.
The pellet removed from the boy’s cheek was a lead,
hourglass-shaped pellet that would have come from a pellet gun that
uses an air pump or carbon dioxide cartridge to fire the projectiles,
Shulman said.
It was not the type of pellet fired by airsoft guns. The City
Council in May voted to ban the firing of airsoft guns, which greatly
resemble real guns.
Pellet guns were already illegal.
“It’s deplorable conduct,” Councilman Steve Bromberg said of the
shooting. “When something like that hits close to home, we take
notice. It’s not something we’re used to seeing in our city.
“Using a pellet gun, an airsoft gun or a real gun, shooting
anybody with anything is an act of viciousness.”
Councilman Dick Nichols abstained from the vote on the airsoft
guns, citing his belief in the 2nd Amendment right to bear arms.
Though he adamantly believes in those rights, he said he was
disheartened that someone would disobey the law and be so
irresponsible as to shoot at someone unprovoked.
“They certainly shouldn’t be shooting people or near people,” he
said. “To have somebody just shot riding a bicycle, this is
ridiculous.”
Before the law change, groups of children were staging mock
battles with one another in the Back Bay area with airsoft guns,
causing concern among residents and environmentalists. But this is
the first case Shulman has heard of someone being randomly shot at,
he said.
In 2002, police believed paint-ball players had caused the death
of a man rollerblading on Back Bay Drive. But months later, the
coroner found that Gary Holdren had fallen and cracked his skull on
the pavement and that paintball debris found nearby did not
contribute to his death.
* MARISA O’NEIL covers public safety and courts. She may be
reached at (949) 574-4268 or at [email protected].
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