USA: An angry son of a customer shot a McDonald's employee in the face on Tuesday, leaving his condition critical, according to police
According to police sources, when a 40-year-old customer complained that his french fries were cold around 7 a.m. Monday while FaceTiming with his son, a 23-year-old fast food worker was taking orders inside a Brooklyn restaurant.
According to police, the son became involved in a fast-food brawl after an argument with the employees of his mother's store outside McDonald's. Then he pulled out a 9 mm gun and shot the worker.
A street vendor described a shooting victim bleeding from a bullet wound lying on concrete after being shot, saying, "We were sitting here and we heard 'pop'!"
They got into a fight over french fries at McDonald's. He worked diligently. He stood up for his co-workers. According to another street vendor, the crying co-workers of the victim were waiting for the ambulance to arrive, and after the police arrived, some of them shouted at the mother of the suspect who shot. He also narrated how a man saw her on the street, took off her shirt and put the laborer on it to stop bleeding.
According to officials, the victim was hit on the side of his neck just above his jaw line, and was listed in serious condition at Brookdale University Hospital on Tuesday. A colleague of the victim described the McDonald's employee as "[a] really nice guy."
According to sources, the mother told the police that she heard gunshots but did not fire. A shell shell was found on the spot.
The 20-year-old suspect was taken into custody for questioning at the 79th police station premises. He lives with his mother about four blocks away. He was facing legal action.
According to a police source, the suspect's possible involvement in a non-fatal shooting that took place in the same neighborhood in May was already under investigation.
That strange incident reminded me of an April incident when a customer shot and killed a Chinese food delivery person because he didn't receive duck sauce with his order.
The McDonald's shooting at a fast food restaurant in the city wasn't the only violent incident this year. On March 28, when Melvin Dijon was ordering breakfast at a McDonald's on Seventh Avenue near Madison Square Garden, 31-year-old parolee Rashid Osundaro allegedly passed him out with a cold. Other shocked patrons watched in silence, refusing to intervene.
Earlier that month, an angry customer attacked a staff member while waving a stick inside a McDonald's in East Harlem, just steps from Burger King, where a teen was killed on January 9, according to police. . It was done the cashier was shot dead.
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After shooting in an East Village parking area no injuries were reported