By Demorris A. Lee
Posted: Apr 05, 2009 02:10 PM
It is the kind of crime you usually hear about in the major metropolitan cities.
In the middle of the night, someone drives by a small house and pumps bullets out of a
semi automatic rifle, barely releasing the trigger.After the storm of bullets, the car speeds off and when the smoke settles, an innocent bystander is killed.
And it's a child.Early Sunday morning that scene played out on Preston Avenue South in Bartlett Park,
Sunday morning, it was 8-year-old Paris Whitehead-Hamilton was killed.
But for residents in one of the city's poorest communities, murder has become all too common.
"This is the second murder this year and it's just April," said Twynette Green, 37. "For this little neighborhood, that's two to many. And it's on the same street."
In 2006, Green's neighbor Jacqueline Johnson was killed by a longtime friend when she was stabbed in the neck with a screwdriver after an argument.
Last September, Mandy M. Sampson was shot and killed by robbers. She was found in an alley just off Preston Avenue, Green said. Sampson was 27 years old and a mother of two
In January, 15-year-old Malayshia Kierra Gamble's body was found in a vacant lot on Preston Avenue. She had been shot in the head. There's a makeshift memorial at the spot with wooden crosses, stuffed animals and a dying potted palm tree.'
And now Paris..
"That innocent child," said Preston Avenue resident Jacquelyn Fleming, 52.
She was asleep in the front room at 771 Preston Avenue S. At about 2:20 a.m, someone unloaded about 50 bullets in the front of the house with a semiautomatic rifle, according to St. Petersburg police. There were nine people in the home, police said.
One of those bullets hit Paris in the upper body. She died at Bayfront Medical Center.
"We are outraged and incensed," said Chief Chuck Harmon of St. Petersburg police. "We are going to do what we can to get the people responsible for this and make sure they end up behind bars."
Harmon said the shooting was an act of retaliation between several teens and young adults who were at the house and another group. He said police had some good ideas about what happened "and we are talking to some people who are specifically involved."
"I am optimistic that we will bring closure to this case in the next few days or hours," Harmon said.
St. Petersburg Mayor Rick Baker said the shooters will be caught.
"We are going to very aggressively go after the folks that were responsible for this and we'll seek the most severe penalties," Baker said. "And we're going to get them."
Residents along the street said that there had been an altercation between several young men who lived at the Preston Avenue house and a community called Bethel Heights. On Wednesday, shots were fired in the air along Preston Avenue but it was during the day.
Paris was living at the house with her aunt Shenita Joseph, 42. The girl's mother, Robin D. Whitehead, died in 2006 from injuries she sustained in a fall. She was 37.
Neighbors said Paris' father, Robert. E. Hamilton was in the military.
"It's shocking to see that baby get hurt," said Green, a 6-year resident of the street and whose 2 year-old grandchild was in the house when the shooting occurred. "At first, we thought it was fire crackers, but then it just locked in and all we heard was shooting.
Paris would ride her pink and purple bicycle up and down Preston Avenue. On today, she was supposed to go fishing with a "God uncle", a neighbor said.
"She was a nice, friendly little girl," said Fleming, 52, who lives a house up from the shooting. "She would always stop and talk to you. She was a sweet-hearted little girl."
Fleming said when she first moved to the Preston Avenue Street in the Bartlett Park community 10 years ago, she used to call the area an "old folks home."
"It was so quiet on this street," Fleming said. "But now, I don't know."
"It's scary to go out the door," said Coretta Matthews, 30, who lives on Preston Avenue. "I want to move from this road. I might be the fifth one. You just never know."
Sunday morning, yellow crime scene tape once again stretched along the street. In front of the ranch style house that was assaulted with early morning bullets was a small plastic tricycle with purple wheels, yellow handle bars and a red seat.
By late afternoon, much of the crime tape was gone and folks returned to their front porch chairs, watching and waving at passer Byers. On a vacant lot across from the house with the bullet holes, a group of children chased one another in play.
Staff writer Mike Brassfield contributed to this article.
Demorris A. Lee can be reached at 445-4174 or dale@sptimes.com
http://www.tampabay.com/news/publicsafety/crime/article989862.eceAnd that folks, is how the MSM is ginning up gun control support, one story at a time! This is South St Petersburg which is a GHETTO run by the Uluru's (black racist group).