Minutes later, eight uniformed police officers arrived, pouring out of an elevator. As McNeal hid under the bed, she heard a struggle and officers yelling, “Shoot him! Shoot him!” Then came a series of shots. “Pop, pop, pop, pop,” she said.
In a matter of seconds, the police officers shot and killed the superintendent, who they said had pointed a gun at them. One officer grappled with the naked man before the shooting started and was shot in the chest during the struggle, police said. His bulletproof vest stopped the slug.
It was unclear whether the injured officer, Christopher Wintermute, had been shot by the building’s superintendent or by his fellow officers during the fight. But the killing of the man, Victor Hernandez, 29, was the fifth deadly shooting by the New York police in a month.
“I did not want him dead,” McNeal said, adding that she worries about the safety of her own sons, who are black and about Hernandez’s age. “I just wanted to find out what was going on.”
Hernandez, a father of two and the son of a police officer, had become the building’s superintendent fairly recently, his family members and neighbors said. McNeal said that before she called 911, Hernandez had been yelling in the hall for about 20 minutes, making vulgar threats about a woman.
The police commissioner, James P. O’Neill, said the officers arrived about 1:50 a.m. and fanned out to search the second-floor hallway of the building, at 2785 Frederick Douglass Blvd. One of them — later identified as Wintermute — encountered the naked man, who pointed a 9-millimeter pistol at the officer, O’Neill said.
“A violent struggle immediately began, and shots were fired,” the commissioner said, noting that he had reviewed footage recorded on the officers’ body cameras.
Wintermute yelled for help as he struggled with Hernandez, and other officers opened fire, hitting the superintendent several times, the commissioner said. Officials have not said if the gun Hernandez was carrying was loaded or if he had fired it.
Hernandez was taken to Harlem Hospital Center, where he was pronounced dead.
O’Neill said Hernandez had been the subject of domestic complaints in the past. Officials later said that he was arrested in 2014 on charges of criminal mischief and contempt. He has never been accused of any crime involving drugs, weapons or violence, officials and family members said.
McNeal said that when she briefly opened the door and saw Hernandez, she did not see a weapon in his hands. “I saw something that looked like a laptop or a tablet,” she said.
During the shooting, McNeal said, she was hiding under her bed in tears. After the shots rang out, she heard officers shout, “Watch the fire.” Shortly afterward, she said she heard them yelling at one another, “Where is the gun?”
After the confrontation ended, McNeal again opened the door and saw Hernandez lying on the floor face up. Police later told her that what she thought was a tablet was actually a firearm.
“I’m still crying,” McNeal said. “I close my eyes, and it’s all I can see and hear.”
Hernandez’s family members and neighbors remembered him as a dedicated father to a 6-year old daughter and an older son, a caring relative and an ambitious man who worked hard.
His aunt, Ana Martinez, said Hernandez grew up in the Crotona Park East neighborhood of the Bronx. He had taken the police officer and firefighter exams and was studying at Bronx Community College, she said.
Hernandez’s ex-wife lived in the Bronx’s Throgs Neck neighborhood, Martinez said. The two had been fighting over custody of their children, and the domestic accusations stemmed from arguments between them, Martinez said.
The ex-wife, Jaimily Hernandez, declined to comment.
Victor Hernandez’s mother, Maria, has spent 19 years as a New York police officer, most recently in the Bronx, and he wanted to follow in her footsteps, according to Martinez. Victor Hernandez also had relatives who were law enforcement officers in Milwaukee, Florida and Puerto Rico.
Given that Victor Hernandez came from a law enforcement family, Martinez said, she doubted her nephew would have acted violently toward police officers, and she disputed the characterization of him as emotionally disturbed or violent.
“They’re depicting him like he was some kind of psycho or something and he was a menace to society, but he was a person,” Martinez said. “His mom was on the force for 19 years. She served that city for 19 years, and they murdered her son.”
In a tribute posted to Facebook, Hernandez’s younger sister, Melissa, said her brother had been her best friend and her protector, an industrious, creative and loving person.
Hernandez “was always good at everything,” she wrote. He learned to play piano by ear, taught himself to make high-quality videos and had strong technical and mechanical skills.
“My brother could do so many things, and it was always clear to me that he was destined for greatness,” wrote Hernandez’s sister, who declined to comment further. “Unfortunately, he’ll never get to use any of his many skills.”
Hours before the shooting, Victor Hernandez ate dinner at a cousin’s house, Martinez said. He had also picked up his mother from the airport, where she had returned from a vacation in the Dominican Republic.
Over text message, his mother, Maria Hernandez, said, “His only contact with the police before this was domestic with his wife.”
She declined to comment further, saying: “Just know Victor was a kind gentle soul. And my entire world.”
In Harlem, neighbors said Victor Hernandez seemed in public to be a quiet, calm person.
Pedro Ramos, 44, who lives on the seventh floor of the building, said he had befriended Hernandez.
“He was a sane, good guy,” Ramos said with a tone of disbelief. “This shocks me.”
Jerome Selassie, 55, who owns the corner store across the street from the site of the shooting, said he saw Hernandez often and never knew him to be violent.
“I saw him last night, at around midnight,” Selassie said. “He was running to his apartment because it was raining. He waved at me. That was the last time I saw him. He looked OK to me.”
The shooting took place across from the offices of Police Service Area 6, which serves several public housing developments in Harlem. Officers walking out of the building Wednesday shook their heads somberly and cautioned one another to “be safe.”
“It’s crazy that it happened right in front of the precinct,” said Fred Marshall, 44, who lives in the area.
He added: “Why do they always have to kill them, man? There are other things they could have done to put him down.”
Wintermute, 32, has been on the police force for seven years, working most of that time on patrol in the 32nd Precinct in Harlem. His wife is also a police officer.
During the struggle with Hernandez, Wintermute was punched several times in the face and took the impact of the bullet hitting his Kevlar vest, officials said. Mayor Bill de Blasio said he was in “good spirits” after the shooting, and he was released from Mount Sinai St. Luke’s hospital a few hours later. Fellow officers applauded him as he was taken in a wheelchair to a waiting police van.
Police have shot and killed five people since Sept. 29, when Officer Brian Mulkeen and an armed man he was trying to arrest were killed in a police fusillade in the Bronx. Four of the shootings occurred in the past eight days.
On Oct. 15, in two separate encounters, officers fatally shot two armed men: one in the Gowanus Houses in Brooklyn and one at the 225th Street subway station in the Bronx. Two days later, also in the Bronx, a police sergeant shot and killed a man during a traffic stop.
Mulkeen was the second officer to be killed by “friendly fire” this year. In February, Detective Brian Simonsen was hit in the chest and killed as he and other officers were firing at a robber in a cellphone store in Queens. The robber turned out to have a fake gun.
Martinez said Hernandez sometimes expressed fear for his mother’s safety because she was a police officer. But his family also feared for his.
“We always told them if the police stop you, you make sure you be respectful and give them whatever they want because you don’t want them to shoot you,” Martinez recalled. “It’s hard when you have minority children, especially boys, and you have to tell them that.”
This article originally appeared in
.