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Most serious charge dropped against community activist with gun in Buffalo school

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Dwayne A. Ferguson, the community activist arrested last month after he was found carrying a loaded handgun at an East Side school where he works with an after-school program, has won dismissal of the most serious charge against him but still faces two other charges,

The felony charge of second-degree criminal possession of a weapon was dropped after it was determined that Ferguson has a permit for the gun he was found carrying Feb. 6 at Harvey Austin Elementary School, according to First Assistant District Attorney Michael J. Flaherty.

But Ferguson still faces a felony charge of criminal possession of a weapon on school grounds and a misdemeanor count of obstructing governmental administration.

The dismissed weapon charge carries a maximum prison sentence of up to 15 years, while the remaining weapon charge involves a maximum sentence of up to four years.

Flaherty said the charge of weapon possession on school grounds had been a misdemeanor but was made a felony under the NY SAFE Act, which Gov. Andrew Cuomo signed into law last year.

The obstruction charge carries a maximum sentence of one year in jail.

Ferguson, 52, of Butler Avenue, was in City Court today for a felony hearing, but his attorney, Joseph A. Agro, waived the hearing.

The case will be presented to an Erie County grand jury or resolved in some other manner in county or state court.

The school on Sycamore Street was put on lockdown shortly after 4 p.m. Feb. 6 when the school office received an anonymous call that there was a man with a gun on or near the school property. About 60 students were in the building for after-school programs.

About 15 patrol cars responded to the scene, and the lockdown ended about four hours later when Ferguson was arrested. He pleaded not guilty and was released on his own recognizance.

Ferguson, longtime president of the MAD DADS Buffalo chapter and a volunteer with Buffalo Peacemakers, which seeks to defuse violence in neighborhoods and at public events, has worked with at-risk youth in after-school programs in various city schools for several years.

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