This page was created by Anonymous.
B. Z. Kondoul assaulted
According to a report in the New York Journal, Kondoul fled from the crowd until he saw a police officer guarding a grocery store, part of the James Butler chain, at West 123rd St and Lenox Avenue. The officer, Patrolman William Clements, drew his revolver and fired at the crowd to hold them back. After he fired two shots, the crowd backed away from the two white men, and turned to throwing objects at them: stones, fruit, garbage can lids. When the crowd closed in again, Clements "emptied his gun." The shots kept the crowd at bay long enough for a police radio car to arrive and "rescue" Clements and Kondoul. The New York Journal reports the event in the sensational language it favored for alleged attacks by blacks on whites: Clement's "heroism" saved Kondoul from "probable death" at the hands of a "gang" crying "Kill him."
A brief report in the New York American is more to the point, simply stating Kondoul was "rescued by a patrolman who fired several shots at his assailants without hitting anyone." Police officers commonly fired shots in the air to attempt to disperse crowds. In this case, however, the reports suggest that Clements fired at the crowd. It is not clear when the event took place, but it does offer evidence that police shooting at residents might have been responsible for the unattributed injuries from gunfire during the disorder.
Note: The spelling of Kondoul's name is different in all the reports: Kondoul in the Journal, Kendel in the Home News, and Aambel in the American.