Drive-by shooting of teens leads to call to action

Drive-by shooting of teens leads to call to action

JILL NANCE/THE NEWS & ADVANCE

Sixteen-year-old E.C. Glass cheerleader Kymberlee Moore stands outside her Pierce Street house on Monday. She was shot in a drive-by shooting last week, and a bullet hole still remains near her front door. A number of people gathered on Monday to promote peace and understanding in the neighborhood.

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Ministers, police officers and neighbors all gathered at the site of a recent drive-by shooting Monday to highlight the need for community action against violence.

The little green house on Pierce Street where 16-year-old Kymberlee Moore was shot last week still bears a bullet hole near its front door.

Kymberlee, a student at E.C. Glass High School, was shot in the back on July 28 while sitting on the front porch with her family. A teenage boy also was grazed by a bullet.

LOVE WALK
- What: Churches United for Service will go door-to-door to discuss community concerns with residents
- When: 9 a.m. Saturday, Aug. 16
- Where: The walk will start at Miller Park and continue through the Pierce Street and White Rock Hill neighborhoods
- This will be the city’s second Love Walk. The first took place two days before the Pierce Street shooting.

Neither was seriously injured. A male juvenile, whose name was not released, has been arrested and charged with several felonies, including malicious wounding and shooting from a moving vehicle.

“It’s been rough,” Sharon Cash, one of Kymberlee’s aunts, said Monday. “On Saturday, someone shot a firecracker off, and the three of us who were out here (on the porch) freaked out. Then the other day, someone dropped something at work, and I just started crying.”

Cash witnessed the shooting, as did several other relatives and friends. The family often congregates on their front porch, which is lined with chairs for that purpose.

On Monday, a group of city advocates including pastors, police and neighborhood watch leaders assembled in front of that porch to issue a call to action.

The event was a continuation of an anti-violence campaign launched this summer by the local group Churches United for Service.

“It takes a village to raise a child, and part of that village is here today,” said Gerard Hutcherson, a lay minister at Jackson Street United Methodist Church and longtime friend of the family.

“We want to let (this family) know that we love them and care about them,” he said. “We’re concerned, and we’re here for you.”

Churches United for Service is in the process of forming a long-term plan for combating violence. The ministerial group began speaking out this year after a string of incidents that included several deaths.

So far this year, Lynchburg has seen three homicides, two nonfatal shootings and a public death that was later deemed a suicide by police.

The most recent homicide occurred on the same night of the Pierce Street shooting. Christopher Michael Flood, 35, was stabbed to death on Triangle Place.

Police have charged a Lynchburg man, 49-year-old William Andrew Hayward, with murder in that case.

Just two days prior to that, Churches United for Service organized what it called a “Love Walk,” an event that had volunteers hitting the streets to find out what residents were concerned about.

“A lot of people expressed hopelessness,” recalled the Rev. Artemus Dixon of New Dearington Baptist Church. “They felt there were no jobs, no opportunities. … The youth feel like they have no future. Some may not even feel like they’ll make it to 21.”

Correcting that is part of the group’s future goals, he added.

A second Love Walk is scheduled for Aug. 16, a Saturday. Participating churches also plan to start an adopt-a-cop program in hopes of creating a more personal connection between congregations and neighborhood police officers.

Kymberlee, a cheerleader who’s since rejoined her squad at practice, said she hoped her story would get others to think before they act.

Sitting on the porch, she looks at the ground and says quietly she doesn’t like to talk much about the shooting.

“It’s been hard, but not too hard,” she said. “I haven’t let it get to me or anything like that.”

“I appreciate this,” she added of the gathering on the front lawn. “It shows a lot of people care.”

Acting Police Chief Parks Snead, one of the speakers at the event, said this type of community involvement was “critical” to keeping the city safe.

“The police department always says, ‘Working for you, we can accomplish a great deal,’” he said. “But working with you, we can accomplish anything.”

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Reader Reactions

Flag Comment Posted by LynchburgRes on August 05, 2008 at 6:08 am

I am saddened to read this. The girl and boy who were shot didn’t deserve that to happen to them, no matter what the reason.
The thing I see the most and was ot even metioned in this article is the growing presence of gangs in the city. There are graffiti turning up around empty buildings and in some places on Fort Ave, even buildings that house current, operating businesses. The gang signs have to come down. They have to see that they are not only not wanted, they are being watched and reported.
If you see gang signs in your area, it may not be an emergency, but the police department has a non-emergency number. Call them and let them know you saw a gang sign spray painted on the end of a building, or a traffic sign, or on the pavement in front of a house. The number allows you to report it anonymously, so you don’t have to worry about gang related retaliation for reporting them.
This is serious stuff, and it’s going to get worse if we don’t take the bull by the horns now, recognize it for what it is and push back in any way we can.
The other day in the Kroger parking lot I watched a kid, he looked about 13 or 14 waving his hands around, making gang signs to anyone in the parking lot who could see him. I saw him, if it had of been my kid, I’d have chewed him out in public right there and grounded him for the rest of his teenaged life.
Here are some links to help recognize these things…
http://www.fotosearch.com/ESP009/1440-207671-01/

http://www.fotosearch.com/ESP009/1440-207672-01/

http://www.shmoo.com/~bmc/photos/random/tn/gang-sign.jpg.html

This last link is the graffiti link. Read it and learn about the random artwork around you.

http://www.slsheriff.org/html/org/metrogang/graffiti.html

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