If your a gang member please leave now!!
You will not like this blog so you have been warned.
I don't like to use the word HATE but i can't help but HATE every thing you stand for.
I hate this---->
The small children continue playing into the night and do not notice the red Mercedes as it slowly passes. Eight shots are fired and behind them a boy falls to the ground in disbelief; I hear the hysterical sound of screams echoing throughout the neighborhood. The children do not grieve for a stranger who lies dead on the curb, but rather, their tears drop for their 6-year-old sister who bleeds from her head. Moments later the mother rushes outside to see her daughter prostrated on the black tar; her curly hair soaked from the thick red puddle. She squeezes the child in her arms and presses the dripping head against her chest. Her high-pitched cracking screams of "NO!" ring in my ears, and I come to realize one thing. IT IS TOO LATE!
And this is why i HATE them--->
Paralyzed girl, 5, confronts man who admitted shooting her
BOSTON (AP) -- Five-year-old Kai Leigh Harriott sat in the front of the courtroom in her wheelchair and looked directly at the man who had just pleaded guilty Thursday to firing the shot that paralyzed her.
At first, she broke down, crying harder than she ever had since the night nearly three years ago when Anthony Warren, after an argument he and his brother had with her neighbors, fired three rounds at the three-family house where she was sitting outside on the porch.
After a sip of water and some consoling from her mother, Kai spoke.
"What you done to me was wrong," she said to the man seated just 10 feet away. "But I still forgive him."
Warren, 29, of Boston, had been scheduled to go to trial in Suffolk Superior Court on six assault and weapons charges last month but instead pleaded guilty to all charges Thursday.
Prosecutors say Warren, his brother and others had an argument with people who lived on the first floor of the building in Boston's Dorchester neighborhood where Kai lived with her family. They left, then Warren returned around 11 p.m. on July 1, 2003, and fired three rounds at the house.
One of the bullets hit Kai -- then 3 years old -- as she sat on a third-floor porch with an older sister. The bullet shattered her spine, permanently paralyzing her from the chest down.
After his guilty plea, the girl, her mother and two sisters gave emotional statements to Judge Margot Botsford, who then sentenced Warren to 13-15 years in prison and five years of probation.
Kai's mother, Tonya David, said she tried to hate Warren but had forgiven him a long time ago.
"For you to come today and plead guilty is the greatest victory of all," she said.
After Kai spoke, Warren stood in shackles and handcuffs and accepted responsibility.
"I'm sorry," he told her. She said nothing as her mother embraced Warren, and members of their families hugged in the courtroom.
"She has the strength of a trooper," David said, noting that her daughter showed more emotion at the hearing than she ever had. "She has never complained once. She has never cried about being in a wheelchair, not once, not once
."
Warren, 29, of Boston, had been scheduled to go to trial in Suffolk Superior Court on six assault and weapons charges last month but instead pleaded guilty to all charges Thursday.
Prosecutors say Warren, his brother and others had an argument with people who lived on the first floor of the building in Boston's Dorchester neighborhood where Kai lived with her family. They left, then Warren returned around 11 p.m. on July 1, 2003, and fired three rounds at the house.
One of the bullets hit Kai -- then 3 years old -- as she sat on a third-floor porch with an older sister. The bullet shattered her spine, permanently paralyzing her from the chest down.
After his guilty plea, the girl, her mother and two sisters gave emotional statements to Judge Margot Botsford, who then sentenced Warren to 13-15 years in prison and five years of probation.
Kai's mother, Tonya David, said she tried to hate Warren but had forgiven him a long time ago.
"For you to come today and plead guilty is the greatest victory of all," she said.
After Kai spoke, Warren stood in shackles and handcuffs and accepted responsibility.
"I'm sorry," he told her. She said nothing as her mother embraced Warren, and members of their families hugged in the courtroom.
"She has the strength of a trooper," David said, noting that her daughter showed more emotion at the hearing than she ever had. "She has never complained once. She has never cried about being in a wheelchair, not once, not once.
Here's the video--
http://www3.whdh.com/video/player/whdh_video.php?f=l060414_harriott.wmv
She forgive's him for what he did and he's sorry now but her life will NEVER be the same.
There are more story -grandmother-father-sons.
sorry to say but more to come in this blog later.
Here's one more sad one.
The young boy fatally shot an 8-year-old cousin while they were playing with an illegal gun at home in Boston's troubled Dorchester neighborhood
The victim had just finished first grade and was a hardworking child who never looked for trouble, according to his teachers.
Relatives who lived there told police that LaQuarrie was killed when armed intruders burst into the apartment. But police were skeptical about that story and closely questioned the family about it, according to two police sources who spoke on the condition of anonymity.
"
This is a case with two victims -- you have a victim who was shot and you have a 7-year-old who has to live with the fact that this happened for the rest of his life," police commissioner Davis said. "So it is hard to call anybody a suspect in this case, except for that person who brought that gun into the house."
Family friend Denise Watts said LaQuarrie's relatives are struggling to come to terms with the fact that his cousin accidentally shot him to death.
"I don't have a clue where he got this gun, but just I hope that this is a wake up call to all the young mothers in Boston: Guns and babies do not mix," she said.
At the
School in Dorchester, where the boy was expected to enter second grade this fall, teachers burst into tears when they learned Monday morning that he had been killed, said Principal
He was a hard worker and a great reader and he was a good friend to his classmates," said O'Connell. "He was a wonderful little boy."
"It's an unusual thing to happen," she said. "It's so shocking."