Pointing to blood-stained pavement where a cabdriver was shot and killed, the north Minneapolis resident shook her head in dismay at another violent death in the neighborhood.
At taxi stands from the airport to downtown, fear shook cabbies, who spoke of the job's dangers and said they intend to avoid the troubled North Side.
And on a street corner a mile away from the crime scene, the mother of a 3-year-old gunned down in an unrelated case said she felt sick upon hearing about yet another citizen slain by gunfire. "The killing needs to stop," she pleaded.
Their distress followed the death of Yellow Cab driver William R. Harper, who was shot in the back in a stopped taxi near 400 23rd Av. N., part of the Hawthorne neighborhood that is one of the city's worst areas for gunfire. Harper, who lived with his older brother in Roseville, was 56.
"He was a kind person," said his brother, Robert Harper. "It's just really sad. If someone really needed the money, he probably would have given it to them."
Harper spent most of his life driving cabs or, more recently, his Lincoln Town Car limousine, ferrying customers back and forth to the Mystic Lake Casino in Prior Lake, according to his brother. Last week, William Harper had just started driving a cab in Minneapolis again for the first time in years after another driver talked him into returning.
"He did it for the excitement," said Jim Wawers, Harper's cousin. "He did it for something to do. He didn't need the money." He said his cousin was a lifelong Vikings fan and season-ticket-holder who loved to go fishing and spend time with his pet Cairn terrier, Scamper.
The motive for the attack remains unclear. While witnesses have been detained for questioning, no one has been arrested and a weapon hasn't been found. Authorities did not turn up any evidence after briefly sealing off the area and bringing a police dog to the scene, according to Minneapolis police Sgt. Melissa Chiodo.