Police search for 2 in shooting
Lolita Harper
Police are searching for at least two men after numerous shots were
fired in an apartment complex carport on Friday night, hitting two
Costa Mesa men, officials said Monday.
A 24-year-old was shot in the calf and an 18-year-old in the
stomach in the 1900 block of Maple Avenue at 10 p.m. Friday night,
Costa Mesa Police Lt. Dale Birney said. The victims remain
hospitalized, and their names have not been released.
Police are still unsure of the cause of the shooting on the city’s
Westside, but said preliminary investigation does not point to gang
violence.
“All the information we have received at this point does not point
to any type of gang-related criminal activity,” Birney said.
The two victims were hanging out in the carport Friday night when
the shooters jumped the surrounding fence and opened fire, striking
each victim once, Birney said. Many surrounding cars were also hit
and damaged, he said.
The victims were taken to Western Medical Center in Santa Ana,
where they were treated for their injuries. Hospital spokespeople
were unable to release the men’s conditions without a name.
Shootings resulting in injuries are rare in Costa Mesa, Birney
said, estimating less than a handful in any given year. If the
suspects are caught, they will face charges of attempted murder.
The shooting comes less than a month after the stabbing of a
teenager on Shalimar Drive, also on the city’s Westside. The
attackers in the stabbing were suspected gang members, police said,
while Friday’s shooters have not been designated as such.
Crime on the Westside has been a hot topic for a political group
whose members bill themselves as “improvers.” Councilman Allan
Mansoor, who was supported by the improver camp, ran on a platform of
eliminating crime throughout the city, especially on the Westside.
Mansoor could not be reached for comment Monday.
The number of violent crimes in 2002 plummeted 30.8% in Costa
Mesa, according to preliminary crime statistics released by
California Atty. General Bill Lockyer late last month. Those numbers
were in sharp contrast to the previous year, when crime numbers
climbed in all categories, leaving police especially worried about
the rise in street crime.
The two crimes that experienced the biggest drop were robbery,
which decreased 36.8%, and aggravated assault, which dropped 23.2%.
Since 2001, Costa Mesa police have aggressively targeted violent
crime by targeting problem areas within the city.
* LOLITA HARPER writes columns Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays and
covers culture and the arts. She may be reached at (949) 574-4275 or
by e-mail at lolita.harper@latimes.com.
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