🚨 The Gutter Report: Angry Bugatti Shot and Robbed for Chain in Bronx Gas Station Attack

Federal-identified Black Stone Gorilla leader and recently released Bronx figure targeted in calculated robbery

Bronx, New York — A Bronx street figure known publicly as Angry, whose real name is Cory Hickson, was shot and robbed of his chain at a Shell gas station in Baychester on February 16, 2026 — a targeted attack involving a man whose name carries documented weight far beyond social media.

Angry, whose Instagram 👉🏾 @niggas_hate_bugatti shows him rebuilding his presence after recently coming home from incarceration, survived the shooting. But the robbery itself signals something deeper than street opportunism.

This was not random.

This was a direct hit on a visible and historically significant figure.

🦍 Documented Leadership and Federal Identification

Federal authorities previously identified Cory Hickson — Angry — as a leader within the Black Stone Gorilla set, a faction operating under the Untouchable Gorilla Stone Nation.

He was named in Operation Black Stone, a sweeping enterprise corruption investigation that targeted leadership figures alleged to be operating within a structured criminal organization. His designation as leadership elevated his profile both in the eyes of law enforcement and on the street.

Leadership creates influence.

Influence creates visibility.

Visibility creates vulnerability.

💎 The Chain That Made Him a Target

👑 Angry pictured wearing the chain that was ultimately taken during the robbery


According to reports, suspects approached Angry at the gas station and initiated a robbery. During the confrontation, he was shot and his chain was successfully taken before the attackers fled.

Chains function as more than jewelry — they signal identity, survival, and rank. Taking a chain from a man with known standing carries both financial and symbolic meaning.

This wasn’t just theft.

It was a statement.

⛽ A Public Shooting With Private Meaning

🚔 NYPD presence at the Shell gas station where Angry was shot and robbed

Police responded to the shooting and transported Angry to the hospital. He survived.

The suspects escaped.

No arrests have been publicly announced.

The location — a public gas station — reinforces how exposed even historically protected figures can become when moving without security.

🔓 Recently Home, Recently Exposed

Court records confirm that Hickson had been involved in criminal proceedings as recently as 2025, aligning with his recent release from custody.

Coming home represents a transition.

But transitions are fragile.

Figures who previously held rank or visibility often reenter environments where old perceptions remain — and where symbolic targets still exist.

Social media amplifies that exposure.

His Instagram presence shows a man reestablishing identity, visibility, and presence.

But visibility can attract both supporters and predators.

⚠️ The Reality of Rank and Exposure

Angry’s shooting illustrates a broader reality: status does not eliminate vulnerability.

In fact, it can create it.

The same symbols that establish identity — chains, presence, recognition — can also mark someone for targeting.

This incident stands as a reminder of how quickly visibility can convert into exposure, and how even figures with documented standing are not immune to public violence.

The chain was taken.

But the message behind it travels further than the jewelry itself.

Not for clicks — for clarity.

— Elliott Carterr, LFTG Radio

📱 TikTok: @elliott_carterr

📺 YouTube: @lftgradio

🌐 Website: LFTGRadio.com

⚖️ The Gutter Justice Project

❤️ Support the work: LFTGRadio.com/donate

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✈️ The Gutter Report: Kamora Freeland — Staten Island Teen Who Took Flight and Made History