
The Manhattan District Attorney’s Office has decided not to move forward with a felony assault charge against one of the men accused of throwing snowballs at NYPD officers during a chaotic confrontation in Washington Square Park, reducing the most serious count at his court appearance Thursday.
Gusmane Coulibaly, 27, had initially been charged with assault on a police officer, obstruction of governmental administration, and disorderly conduct for his alleged role in what authorities described as a large-scale snowball incident in the park.
At his arraignment Thursday evening, prosecutors declined to pursue the assault-on-an-officer charge. The remaining counts were scaled back to harassment and obstruction of governmental administration, classified as a second-degree violation and a misdemeanor, according to the criminal complaint.
Patrick Hendry, president of the Police Benevolent Association, pushed back strongly against the decision, rejecting suggestions that the episode was harmless fun. He told reporters that the purported “playful snowball fight” was “an attack on the uniform these police officers wear every day.”
“This was a grown adult that was here. Our police officers went to this location, on the rooftop, for a disorderly group, came down, and they were surrounded by hundreds of individuals who then attacked all police officers,” Hendry said.
Hendry further alleged that Coulibaly and three other suspects who have not yet been apprehended deliberately hardened the snowballs with ice and rocks before throwing them at officers. He criticized what he described as a minimization of the incident through the reduced charges.
“So why wasn’t assault charged? Why was harassment charged? Why do they feel that that didn’t cause an injury to a police officer, which he clearly, clearly has an injury below his eye?” Hendry said.
In court, Manhattan Assistant District Attorney Victoria Notaro acknowledged that one officer, identified only as “PO Johnson,” experienced redness, tenderness, and pain on the left side of his face near his eye. However, she stated that it was difficult to establish “that the injury was obtained directly from the defendant.”
Hendry said the officer remains on sick leave and is “on the mend.”
Coulibaly did not speak during the proceeding. His attorney, George Vomvolakis, argued that the police department was channeling frustration over Mayor Zohran Mamdani toward his client, whom he described as an aspiring social media personality.
Vomvolakis echoed the characterization offered by Mamdani in the immediate aftermath of the incident, when the mayor said those involved were “kids doing snowballs.” He also repeatedly referred to Coulibaly as being 22 years old, though court records list his age as 27.
While Vomvolakis sought to portray the matter as a minor infraction akin to a “glorified summons,” insisting that Coulibaly “had no idea what the intent was” when he allegedly threw the snowball, Judge Michelle Weber disagreed, stating that his participation “showed a complete lack of judgment.”
The judge ordered Coulibaly released under supervision. He is scheduled to return to court on April 9 in connection with the snowball case and on March 15 in a separate matter involving an alleged confrontation with a subway rider.
{Matzav.com}