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Two Men Arrested

Amuri Greene, 21, was arraigned from a hospital bed after allegedly shooting 7-month-old Kaori Patterson-Moore from the back of a moped in Brooklyn.

Jamie Taylor3 min read
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Amuri Greene, 21, was charged with three counts of murder after allegedly firing from the back of a moped and killing 7-month-old Kaori Patterson-Moore as she sat in her stroller at the corner of Humboldt and Moore streets in East Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Arraigned Friday evening, April 4, from his hospital bed, where he was being treated for a broken leg sustained while fleeing the scene, Greene pleaded not guilty and was held without bail.

The shooting unfolded at approximately 1:20 p.m. on Wednesday, April 1, when investigators say Greene and 18-year-old Matthew Rodriguez rode down the block on a moped, Greene firing multiple rounds from the back. Kaori's mother ducked into a nearby bodega after hearing shots and discovered her daughter had been struck in the head. The infant was transported to a local hospital and pronounced dead approximately one hour later. Two other people with strollers and additional children were on the same block when the shots rang out.

In the three days between the shooting and the arraignment, investigators built the case through surveillance footage released publicly during the citywide manhunt, which showed both suspects on the moped, and tips fielded through the NYPD's Crime Stoppers hotline, where a $5,000 reward had been posted for information leading to the second suspect. That hunt crossed state lines: NYPD detectives, working alongside the U.S. Marshals Regional Fugitive Task Force, tracked Rodriguez to Pennsylvania and took him into custody there. Charges against Rodriguez are pending, and he is expected to be extradited to New York.

The full charge sheet filed against Greene reflects the breadth of the carnage prosecutors allege he caused: three counts of murder, one count of attempted murder, five counts of criminal possession of a weapon, two counts of attempted criminal possession of a weapon, and two counts of assault. As of Friday, police had not recovered the weapon used in the killing.

NYPD Chief of Detectives Joseph Kenny confirmed that Greene "has no arrest history in New York City" but identified him as "a gang associate out of the Marcy Houses," the 27-building, 1,705-apartment NYCHA complex in Bedford-Stuyvesant made internationally familiar as Jay-Z's childhood home. Kenny said investigators are examining a gang "beef" between rival housing project crews as the motive behind the midday attack. Commissioner Jessica Tisch called the killing "a tragedy that truly shocks the conscience," and Mayor Zohran Mamdani, speaking at the April 1 press conference, said: "There are no words that can mend the heartbreak this family is feeling now, no declaration strong enough to lift the grief they are now forced to carry, no embrace wide enough to heal the hole that has been left in their lives."

The killing arrived against a backdrop of historically low citywide crime: through the preceding Sunday, the NYPD had recorded 52 homicides in 2026, down 29% from the same stretch the prior year, with 2025 already on the books as a record-low year for gun violence. None of that cushioned what happened on Humboldt Street. With Rodriguez awaiting extradition from Pennsylvania and Greene held without bail, prosecutors will next have to establish whether the shooting at Humboldt and Moore was part of a targeted gang dispute or a chaotic act of violence that placed Kaori Patterson-Moore, and every other child on that block, directly in the crossfire.

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