NY West Indian Day Parade marred by nearby slaying

West Indian Day Parade
In this Monday, Sept. 2, 2013, file photo, Bill de Blasio, foreground second from right, dances with his family as he makes his way along Eastern Parkway in the Brooklyn borough of New York during the West Indian Day Parade. (AP Photo/Tina Fineberg, File)

NEW YORK (AP) — Colorful floats, elaborate costumes, politicians and merrymakers filled the streets Monday for the annual West Indian Day Parade, a Caribbean celebration and political see-and-be-seen event that was marred by a fatal shooting nearby before the official festivities got underway.
The parade, one of the city’s largest, has been scarred by violence in recent years.
Hours before the parade stepped off, a “career criminal” who had recently been paroled opened fire on a crowd of people who had already begun parade festivities in Brooklyn, police Commissioner William Bratton said. A 55-year-old man was killed, and the suspect was taken into custody.
Last year, two people were fatally stabbed at the parade, and a man was shot to death in 2011.
Mayor Bill de Blasio defended the importance of the parade despite the violence that has often surrounded it.
“The vast, vast majority have a wonderful time and only a few individuals get out of line,” he said at a breakfast attended by elected officials, parade organizers and local dignitaries before the parade.
“This parade started small, became big and is one of the great events in our city,” he said.
Sporting a colorful tribal shirt, the mayor was joined on the hot, humid day by his wife, Chirlane McCray, who is of Caribbean decent, and their children, Dante and Chiara.
West Indian Day Parade
Dressed to march in the annual West Indian Day Parade, Brittany Grice poses for a photograph as she makes her way to the route along Brooklyn’s Eastern Parkway, in New York, Monday, Sept 1, 2014. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)

The parade celebrates Caribbean culture and echoes traditional pre-Lenten Carnival festivities, with dancers wearing elaborate, feathered costumes.
The event, which draws more than 1 million people, also provides one of the last big stages before the Sept. 9 primary.
Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams was this year’s grand marshal.

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