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NYC’s mean streets claim 200 teens in gun violence over 10 years

The biggest danger faced by New York teens is simply walking the city’s mean streets.

A shocking study by the Health Department reveals that 200 kids age 15 through 17 died from gunfire — more than any other cause of injury between 2002 and 2011.

Sixty-three others died from stabbings.

Bullets proved far more deadly than cars. Eighty teens died as a result of car accidents, the second-leading cause of death.

Thirty-five died from suicide by hanging and 33 from accidental falls.

More than 53 percent of the teen deaths were classified as homicides. Two-thirds of those victims were black.

The study’s findings come amid a spike in shootings in the Big Apple this year — as well as new constraints on street stops by cops looking for weapons.

Bedford-Stuyvesant and Crown Heights in Brooklyn was the most deadly area for teens, with 31 gun-related deaths.

It was followed by Brooklyn’s East New York and High Bridge-Morrisania in The Bronx, with 16 apiece.

Thirteen teens were victims of gun violence in both Bronx’s Crotona-Tremont and Brooklyn’s East Flatbush.

East Harlem saw nine shooting deaths. Based on its population, El Barrio had the second-highest death rate — 18.2 per 100,000 residents.

Bedford-Stuyvesant/Crown Heights had the dubious distinction of scoring the highest rate: 20.5 per 100,000.

Even upscale corners of the city, like Downtown Brooklyn/Brooklyn Heights/Park Slope, were not immune, recording a combined eight shooting fatalities.

“Nine out of every 10 firearm-related deaths . . . were homicides, compared to 64 percent nationwide,” according to the 2013 study.

Among the teens included in the gunfire body count were:

  • 17-year-old Cory Squire, the dad of a 3-year-old. He was shot once in the back of the head as he walked down a Harlem street in May 2009. He had been trying to cut his ties with the notorious Bloods gang at the time.
  • Juan Otero, 15, shot in East Harlem in June 2011.
  • College-bound Genice Clark, 17, shot dead in June 2010 after getting into a fight with another girl.

There was some good news in the report.

The city’s youth firearms homicide rate was higher than the national rate — but was less than half the average rate in other big cities, the study found.

For example, the teen shooting homicide rate was more than three times higher in Philadelphia and Chicago and more than twice as high in Los Angeles.

A big part of the problem comes from out-of-state.

The report said politicians must do more to stop the influx of illegal guns coming into the city from places where firearms are easy to buy.