Index  ›  legal  ›  NY Post
legal · NY Post ↗

Baby-faced street gang named ‘McKillville’ waged yearlong turf war in working-class NYC nabe

NY Post Published Jun 29, 2026 Reviewed Jul 1, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
Citation-ready fact
19 reputed gang members were charged with conspiracy, attempted murder, assault and weapons tied to a dozen shootings
19 · gang members12 · shootings
indictment, indictment
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
Seven of the gangbangers were 17 at the time they were indicted, while three were 15 and one was 14
7 · 17-year-olds3 · 15-year-olds1 · 14-year-olds
Darcel Clark, District Attorney
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
11 guns were recovered in the operation
11 · guns
prosecutors, prosecutors
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
Many of the teen gang members split their time with four different gangs to pull off 13 hits that left four bystanders wounded
4 · gangs13 · hits4 · bystanders wounded
authorities, authorities
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
The defendants injured four innocent bystanders
4 · innocent bystanders injured
Jessica Tisch, NYPD Commissioner
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
The state’s Raise the Age statute raised the age of criminal responsibility to 18
18 · age of criminal responsibility
Darcel Clark, District Attorney
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
The leader of the McKillville gang was 28 years old
28 · leader age
Darcel Clark, District Attorney
View source ↗

See more of our coverage in your search results.

A baby-faced street gang run by a 28-year-old ringleader terrorized a working-class Bronx neighborhood for months, turning it into a shooting gallery that left innocent bystanders wounded, prosecutors said Monday.

Tyreik “Tubby” Seth, the reputed boss of the “McKillville” gang, ordered gangbangers as young as 14 to shoot up the borough during a year-long turf war with rivals out of a local housing project, Bronx prosecutors said as they announced charges against 19 reputed gang members.

“These defendants were from 14- to 17-year-old boys who were urged on by men to elevate themselves in the gangs by committing attempted murders and assaults,” Bronx District Attorney Darcel Clark told reporters at a press conference.

The 28-year-old leader of the McKillville gang out of the McKinney Houses ordered his [gang] to shoot rivals, to be risk-takers,” Clark said. “And they did so to be elevated in the game and to win their leader’s favor.”

The gang’s reign of terror ran from May 2025 through April, with crew members plotting shootings on Instagram or through text messages, authorities said.

Videos posted on Instagram, YouTube and other apps showed the teens bragging about their alleged exploits.

The indictment unsealed Monday charges the 19 reputed gang members with conspiracy, attempted murder, assault and weapons tied to a dozen shootings. Seven of the gangbangers were 17 at the time they were indicted, while three were 15 and one was 14, the DA said.

Prosecutors said 11 guns were recovered in the operation.

Many of the teen gang members split their time with four different gangs to pull off 13 hits that left four bystanders wounded, authorities said.

In one brazen shooting captured on surveillance footage, a mom is seen throwing her body on top of her young son to shield him from the stray bullets as the terrified boy bursts into tears.

The operation was a joint effort that involved the DA’s Office and the NYPD.

“These defendants turned communities in the South Bronx into their violent playground by shooting at rivals, injuring four innocent bystanders and placing New Yorkers at risk while shamelessly taking credit for it on social media,” NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch said in a statement.

Clark slammed the state’s lax “Raise the Age” statute, which raised the age of criminal responsibility to 18, giving hardened criminals kid-gloves treatment in court.

“The youth justice system, quite frankly, is broken, and the kids who enter into it were damaged long ago,” she said. “They had no guidance, they hadn’t been any resources. They want jobs, mental health assistance. They want things to do like sports or art, or music, or technology.”

This article was originally published by NY Post ↗. citations.press indexes the source-backed facts above and links to the original. Something wrong? Corrections policy · Report an error