Nizzel George wasn't even 6, but he couldn't wait to turn 7.
It was his lucky number, but more importantly it meant he'd be in the third grade, when he didn't have to walk in line anymore. He didn't like having his face washed, or dogs -- at least until he got used to them. He loved McDonald's, honey buns and singing the Zanewood Community School song, which he proudly knew by heart.
The death of the 5-year-old shot in the back as he slept on his grandmother's couch last June became synonymous with grief and rage for the boy's family, neighborhood activists, even President Obama who evoked Nizzel's name Monday while decrying the gang violence that killed him.
But on Tuesday, when 17-year-old Stephon Shannon was sentenced to 28 years in prison for shooting up the home as part of an ongoing feud, Nizzel was remembered simply as a boy who didn't have enough time.
"He didn't get a chance to drink a lot of milk and grow," Nizzel's uncle, Golden Osagrete, 12, said in a letter he co-wrote with his brother, Willie Grear, 14. Both boys wished they would have taken the bullet instead, they wrote.
"At first I thought it was a dream," Golden wrote. "I thought I would go before him."
The boys' letter, read by a victim advocate, marked a rare poignant courtroom moment in the case, which has been defined by the volatility between the feuding families, requiring high security and a stern warning from Judge Daniel Mabley before the hearing began.
Both sides obliged until afterward, when one of Nizzel's relatives left the courtroom and murmured "baby killer" toward about a dozen of Shannon's supporters. A man in the front row stood up and began to shout toward her until another woman placed a hand over his mouth.