Minneapolis Police Chief Tim Dolan made an unusual appeal Thursday for North Side parents to keep their children indoors after dark, saying his investigators don't know what's driving the sudden violence that has claimed two teenagers' lives this week.
The chief's appeal came on a day of anger and frustration, culminating in an emotional evening prayer vigil, as families and neighbors tried to make sense of the deadly outbreak. City leaders promised more police patrols in north Minneapolis, but they were at a loss to say whether anything connected Wednesday's slaying of Ray'Jon Gomez, 13, to Saturday's killing of Quantell Braxton, 14, or the gunfire that targeted a peace vigil Tuesday night.
"This is something we're going to try to stop, and we need the help and support of the community," Dolan said.
Hours before Dolan spoke, neighbors denounced the slaying of Gomez, known to everyone on his block as Lil' Bow-Wow. About 9 p.m. Wednesday, he had been out riding his bike with two friends near the playground of the old Willard Elementary when someone started shooting.
Deondre Timberlake, 12, was shot in the back. Gomez, struck in the side, ran away. He was found two hours later, face down between two houses. Deondre, taken to North Memorial Medical Center in Robbinsdale, is expected to live.
"My son is so emotionally messed up right now because he feels like he left his friend to die," said Lisa Church, Timberlake's mother. Her son said he saw Gomez fall but then get back up and run. She had to tell her son at the hospital that Gomez was dead.
Wednesday's shootings don't appear related to the killing of Braxton, 14, though the two shootings happened just a few blocks apart, Minneapolis police Capt. Amelia Huffman said. Investigators are looking at all possible motives and connections. No one has been arrested.
"It's the same old silly stuff," said V.J. Smith, a neighborhood activist with the group MAD DADS. "One neighborhood vs. a neighborhood. But they don't understand how they're impacting lives."