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Four men were shot and wounded early yesterday in a Flatbush, Brooklyn, restaurant and one man was killed and another critically wounded in an execution-style shooting in an upper Manhattan bar Friday night, police said. In the Brooklyn incident, three men entered the Five Star West Indian Cuisine Restaurant at 2332 Newkirk Ave. about 12:30 a.m., and one of the men opened fire, striking four men sitting at a table. Police said they do not know if one or all were the intended targets. Frederick Smalls, 19, was struck in the shoulder, thigh and knee; Michael Ayers, 18, was shot in the shoulder, and Clyde Victor, 18, was hit in the leg. They were taken to Kings County Hospital. Quinte Lett, 27, shot in the leg, was taken to Brookdale Hospital Center. None of the injuries were life-threatening, police said. About 9 p.m. Friday, a man pulled a pistol in the crowded Clora Bar and Restaurant on Broadway and 215th St. in Inwood and shot two patrons in the back of their heads, killing one and critically wounding the other, police said. Investigators said the violence erupted after the three men had an argument. It was unclear if the killer surprised his victimsdescribed only as men in their 30sor forced them to turn their backs before he opened fire, detectives said. He fled and is believed to have run into a nearby subway station. Doctors at Columbia Presbyterian Hospital said the wounded man was in very critical condition. Larry Smith, 26, who was walking past as the shooting occurred, said, "I saw all these people running out of the bar and screaming. People were weeping and saying, 'Oh, my God!' in Spanish." Smith said he then entered the bar and saw two men sprawled in the rear. "There was a lot of blood," he said.
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The public response to calls for help in the World Trade Center disaster has been so overwhelming that officials were forced to turn volunteers away yesterday. Not to worry, the disappointed vols were told - the cleanup is far from over, and the need for helping hands will continue for many days and weeks. By 11 a.m., as would-be good Samaritans were arriving at the Jacob Javits Conference Center with offers of clothes, medical supplies, paper towels, saline solution and food, those who came to volunteer their skilled and unskilled labor were being thanked and sent home because of excess numbers. Welders, carpenters, ironworkers and others reluctantly left the area, possibly to return another day to assist in the postdisaster efforts. James Mann, an International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers member from New Jersey, arrived at Javits at 10:45 a.m. with a flyer in his hand: "IBEW Brothers: Steel, electrical and construction workers. Your help is needed to dig through and assist EMG crews." Despite his desire to help, his offer was graciously refused. "I'm really disappointed," said William Valerio, a union carpenter who had shown up at 6:30 a.m. from Hauppauge, L.I., on his day off from work. "I want to help - I'm going to go home, get some rest and come back later." At the Richmond County Bank Ballpark at St. George - a spot that used to have a panoramic view of the Manhattan skyline topped by the World Trade Center towers - Laurie Gruella has helped coordinate Staten Island's relief effort. Staten Islanders donated tons of food, gloves, masks, socks, boots, shirts, tools, flashlight batteries and even dog food, and all of it has been shipped to Manhattan by ferry. "We have so many volunteers, we've made a schedule to fill shifts until Tuesday," Gruella said. At the Salvation Army canteen at the Javits Center, coffee, tea and hot drinks were being distributed to help volunteer wanna-bes warm up from the cold rain. Near the mobile canteen, there are hundreds of cases of bottled water, juice, Gatorade and plastic garbage cans filled with apples. "Who wants a sandwich?" a volunteer yells to passersby. "We brought heroes, potato salad, cookies and cole slaw," said a woman named Debbie, who arrived with a friend from an Alcoholics Anonymous group in Long Island. "A cop at the meeting told us that there's going to be some rough days ahead because they're going to be recovering bodies. We thought delivering some food could help. We spend about $100." William Archbold of New Milford, N.J., saw a report on TV that boots were in short supply, so he brought three pairs of work boots and three rainsuits. Then he stood holding a sign reading: FORGIVE, LOVE, UNITE.
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The Sound Factory, one of New York's biggest nightspots, was targeted yesterday as a "retail outlet" where clubgoers could buy such drugs as Ecstasy and methamphetamine, prosecutors charged yesterday. Manhattan U.S. Attorney Mary Jo White unsealed charges against 15 alleged dealersincluding Alex Coffiel, former head of security at the cavernous W. 46th St. dance club. The nightclub's owners and management were not charged. Sound Factory management did not return calls seeking comment. Authorities charge that Scott Siegel, 23, a former Sound Factory bouncer, paid Coffiel and an unnamed bouncer $200 a night to let his dealers peddle Ecstasy and other drugs in the club. Coffiel, 35, also allegedly shook down clubgoers, confiscating drugs at the doorand selling the contraband to Siegel's distributors. The ring also allegedly sold drugs throughout Manhattan, Queens, Long Island and Westchesterand relied on suppliers from Boston and Houston. Authorities said the ringleaders had planned on expanding to London. The case has links to the recent unsuccessful prosecution against nightclub impresario Peter Gatien, who was acquitted of allowing drug sales in his clubsincluding Limelight and The Tunnel. At Gatien's trial, drug dealers testified they were working out of the Sound Factory and at The Tunnelunder Coffiel's supervision. Another defendant in the Sound Factory case was John Tembeck, 30, a bouncer at Gatien's Tunnel when Coffiel's dealers allegedly were working there, court testimony revealed. Drug Enforcement Administration agents secretly recorded Siegel and several of his lieutenants discussing drug sales at the Sound Factory, according to papers filed by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Jennifer Moore and Joshua Berman. On tape, Siegel and his crew describe a booming trade at the Sound Factory, which holds 3,000 patrons, authorities said. Siegel, of Tuckahoe, Westchester County, was ordered released on $300,000 bail. Coffiel, of Brooklyn, was released on $100,000 bond. So far, 11 of the 15 suspects charged have been arrested, authorities said.
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