An NYPD detective executing a search warrant was shot in the right leg on January 20th. The heroic police officer spent a week and a half in the hospital before being released on Monday afternoon. The officer was treated to a hero’s welcome as he left the hospital with him and his child both wearing NYPD jackets and being greeted by grateful members of the public and NYPD officers. ABC 7 NY Reports–
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“NEW SPRINGVILLE, Staten Island (WABC) — The NYPD detective who was shot during a drug bust on Staten Island was released from the hospital Monday afternoon.
The detective was shot in the right leg while executing a narcotics search warrant on Rockne Street in New Springville on the morning of January 20.
He was conscious and alert when he taken to Staten Island University Hospital North with a non-life-threatening injury. Surgeons said it could be a “career-ending” injury and it required surgery, but was expected to make a full recovery.
The detective was part of a Staten Island narcotics unit carrying out a drug search warrant and arrest warrant.
The officers entered the home and proceeded upstairs, where they say Nelson Pizarro, 39, opened fire. Police say he was in a bedroom and firing his weapon through a door.
Police Commissioner Keechant Sewell said she needed to “emphasize the heroics of the officer who was shot.”
The detective was struck in the leg, but was able to hold up a ballistics shield.
“Even with a serious leg wound, bleeding badly enough that fellow officers had to apply immediate pressure to slow the blood loss, he held a ballistic shield in front of his team to protect them from gunfire,” Police Commissioner Sewell said.
The officers returned fire and Pizarro was also shot in the leg.
The man that police were there to arrest on the warrant, Anthony Marshall, 40, was arrested for criminal sale of a controlled substance. Two women were also taken into custody from the home.
A neighbor was on his porch and heard what happened.
“They walked into the house and then after that, I heard like about 13 or 14 shots, like one after the other,” he said. “And then I heard a lot of radios and cops came from everywhere and I heard ‘officer down, officer down.'”
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