A reveler looks on during the West Indian-American Day Parade....

A reveler looks on during the West Indian-American Day Parade. (Sept. 5, 2011) Credit: Getty Images

Early Monday, revelers had filled the streets in colorful costumes during the annual West Indian Day Parade. But gun violence shocked the parade festivities to a stop in spots. Police said four people were shot and wounded during the parade along its route and a 15-year-old boy was grazed by a bullet nearby.

Police helicopters hovered overhead Monday during the parade, and officers on scooters and on foot patrolled the surrounding blocks.

The upcoming 10th anniversary of the Sept. 11 terror attacks plus a spate of holiday weekend violence have put the city “on heightened alert,” police Commissioner Raymond Kelly said before the parade stepped off.

“We’re doing a lot of things both seen and unseen,” the commissioner said.

A City Council member was detained at the parade after getting into a confrontation with police.

Councilman Jumaane Williams, of Brooklyn, said he was put in handcuffs and was detained by officers after marching on the parkway. He called his detention “an easily avoidable incident involving a select number of police officers.” A spokesman for Williams said the councilman was taken into custody as he walked along a blocked-off sidewalk around 1:30 p.m. Monday. Spokesman Stefan Ringel said Williams had been given permission to walk along the street by a police official but was then stopped by other officers.

Williams was held for about 30 minutes before being released, Ringel said. No charges were filed, he said.

Williams was with an aide for Public Advocate Bill de Blasio. The aide, Kirsten John Foy, also was handcuffed and detained, Williams said.

A video of their detention, distributed by the public advocate’s office, shows Foy being thrown to the ground as he’s taken into custody along the parade route. Police didn’t immediately respond to an email seeking comment on the video.

Bloodshed over the weekend included a Sunday shooting in the Bronx in which eight people, including children, were wounded. Four other people were shot, one fatally, in the East Flatbush section of Brooklyn early Monday.

Kelly said some of the shootings were associated with the West Indian Day festivities.

“Frankly,” he said, “this is something that does happen at this parade.”

Mayor Michael Bloomberg said the problem is “too many guns on the streets of this city.” He said New York has some of the toughest gun laws in the country, “but because it’s so easy to buy guns in other states and just drive them in and sell them in the back of your car ... we’ve got to do something about it. This just can’t go on.” Before the violence Monday, the parade thundered down a Brooklyn thoroughfare with its usual colorful, musical energy.

The annual Labor Day parade celebrates the culture of the Caribbean islands and is one of the city’s largest outdoors events. Modeled on traditional Carnival festivities, it features dancers wearing enormous feathered costumes, music and plenty of food.

“This parade is fabulous!” said Arnold Caballero, who was manning a huge barbecue on a sidewalk. “There are people of all countries, and you meet friends you haven’t seen for years.” The 52-year-old Trinidad native estimated that by day’s end he would sell about 500 pounds of jerk and curry chicken, beef and pork from the stand he’s run for a decade with two friends.

Caballero’s friend Agnes Cherryl Phillips, a 55-year-old native of Grenada, added: “This is the most excellent parade you can ever have, with music and loved ones who come from all over America, from Miami to Canada.” High-spirited spectators behind police barricades joined in with impromptu dancing as music pounded from massive loudspeakers aboard floats rumbling through the Crown Heights neighborhood, which also is home to the world headquarters of the Lubavitch Orthodox Jewish community. Some sat on their porches watching people waving the bright flags of their native islands and enjoying Caribbean delicacies sold by vendors whose barbecues released delicious-smelling smoke into the late summer air.

Antonneal Waldron, 3, was resting on a bench with her parents and 5-month-old brother after strolling the parade route. She summed up the experience in a few words: “Walk, walk, walk! Color, color, color!” Her mother, Jennifer Woldron, completed the picture, saying, “It’s an American event that represents people of many nations: food, flags, islands, music.” Gov. Andrew Cuomo stopped by a pre-parade breakfast before heading to upstate communities where residents are still cleaning up from Tropical Storm Irene.

“Thank you for sharing your culture, your language, your music, your food, your diversity,” he told organizers.

The governor said he would take buckets of jerk chicken to Irene victims.

As the parade wound down on Eastern Parkway, 14-year-old Alexcia Gordon stood smiling by her stand of hand-crocheted earrings — almost a foot long, in all colors, selling for $10 a pair.

“I already sold 27 pairs yesterday, so I had to go home and make some more last night,” said the beaming teenager, decked out in the finery she creates.
 

On the latest episode of "Sarra Sounds Off," Gregg Sarra and Matt Lindsay  recap all the state wrestling action from Albany this past weekend, plus Jared Valluzzi has the ice hockey championship results from Binghamton. Credit: Newsday

Sarra Sounds Off, Ep. 25: Wrestling and hockey state championships On the latest episode of "Sarra Sounds Off," Gregg Sarra and Matt Lindsay recap all the state wrestling action from Albany this past weekend, plus Jared Valluzzi has the ice hockey championship results from Binghamton.

On the latest episode of "Sarra Sounds Off," Gregg Sarra and Matt Lindsay  recap all the state wrestling action from Albany this past weekend, plus Jared Valluzzi has the ice hockey championship results from Binghamton. Credit: Newsday

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