The bullet that killed 5-year-old Nizzel George last month in the home where he was staying came through the wall in an instant, but the events that led to his murder began at least 10 months earlier, according to an internal police report obtained by the Star Tribune.
A summer 2011 street fight that spiraled out of control sparked an ongoing, violent feud between two North Side gangs -- the Skitz Squad and Y.N.T. -- that over the winter and spring included shootings, beatings and repeated threats on social media, according to the report.
So far, the feud has killed two people, including Nizzel. Those involved include juveniles who have grown up surrounded by people who have been shot, arrested or both, and some have had friends or relatives who were murdered, according to jail logs, news reports and booking records.
The father of one of the teenagers at the center of the feud was killed in a shooting 11 years ago.
The apparent inability of the adults in these teens' lives to stop the fighting has generated concern among police and others that more people might die.
Police claimed credit for Thursday evening's capture of an armed gunman who authorities believe is a gang member set on carrying on the gang battle.
Such feuds are difficult to control, one police official said, because violent crime has happened to and around these kids for much of their lives.
"They consider it to be kind of a fact of life that people get killed, that houses get shot up, that adults go to prison, and therefore those things are not a deterrent," said Inspector Mike Martin, who wrote the department's internal report. Though he agreed to discuss the report, Martin was not the newspaper's source in obtaining it.