A 74-year-old man tried to shoot his 47-year-old estranged wife in a Staten Island Bowling alley, but completely (and luckily) missed after firing 3 shots at her! Click below for the full story.

Melissa Nash

A Staten Island bowling alley was turned into a shooting range Wednesday when a 74-year-old man opened fire on his estranged wife.
Armando Tritto squeezed off at least three errant shots at Maureen Tritto, 47, as she was preparing to open the snack bar at Rab’s Country Lanes in Dongan Hills, cops said.
Bullets started flying just before 9 a.m., sending Maureen Tritto and her coworkers diving for cover, witnesses said.
The hot-headed husband stormed into the bowling alley armed with a .357 magnum and charged up to the snack bar, firing two shots at his wife that missed, police said. She scrambled to hide in a closet and Armando Tritto pumped one shot through the closet door that also missed, cops said.
Miraculously, everyone in the bowling alley ambush was spared.
Armando Tritto dropped his revolver and bolted from the 48-lane alley in a white Ford Fusion, police said. Cops arrested him in nearby Todt Hill.
The suspect complained of chest pains and was taken to a hospital before being charged with attempted assault, criminal use and possession of a firearm, reckless endangerment and resisting arrest.
Arthur White, 70, arrived just after the gunplay to find cops swarming the bowling alley.
“That’s when I knew something was wrong. I knew they didn’t come in to bowl early in the morning,” White said.
He bowls at the lanes every morning and usually orders a cup of coffee from Maureen Tritto.
“She was sitting down afterward. She was really crying. She didn’t want anyone to bother her,” he said of the victim.
The shooting happened just moments before the bowling alley was to open for business.
“There were only three staff members in the building,” said Frank Wilkinson, 25, whose family owns the bowling alley.
Wilkinson said he was stunned that Maureen Tritto, who has worked at the bowling alley since 2008, was targeted.
“She’s got a heart of gold,” Wilkinson said.
Maureen and Armando Tritto had recently split, neighbors said. She and her two children left their Staten Island home about a month ago and moved in with her mother and stepfather on the opposite side of Staten Island.
“I think he had a screw loose in his noodle,” a neighbor said of Armando Tritto. “I met him once at the bowling alley and he was not a nice guy.”
Neighbors said Maureen Tritto has two sons, one in his 20s and the other a teenager. It was not clear if Armando Tritto was their father.
On her Facebook page, Maureen Tritto gave no hint that her marriage was falling apart or that her life was in peril, even describing Armando Tritto as a “fabulous husband.” On Monday, she posted that she was “feeling great today” and that “finally things are falling into place.”
Back in November, she posted photos of her husband’s birthday party, in which she prepared baked chicken, shrimp scampi and a chocolate cake topped with chocolate-covered strawberries.