For the past two weeks Heidi Campbell has wanted Cedric Smith Jr. to look into her eyes. She wants him to see the hurt and the pain she's going through.
"I want him to see what he's taken away from me," Campbell said.
Two weeks earlier, court documents say, Campbell's 18-year-old daughter, Allie Campbell, drove with Smith from her St. Cloud home to a Brooklyn Center motel and entered a room where someone was selling pot. Campbell and Smith, 20, went into a bathroom and a gun went off.
The only person who knows what actually happened in that room, Smith, isn't talking — at least not to police.
According to court records, after the shooting, Smith, a felon, ran out of the bathroom covered in blood, yelling to the pot dealer that they needed to get out of there and that they would go to prison for murder. Then they ran from the motel, leaving Campbell lying in a pool of blood.
After his arrest, he was overheard telling another suspect in the case that he told Allie to stop playing with the gun — "not to do it" — when he jumped toward her and the gun went off. In a recording at the jail, though, he told his mother that Campbell killed herself.
Heidi Campbell can't believe that. Neither can her other friends and family, who remember a girl who loved to make them laugh. She never seemed unhappy or depressed. She wanted to get out of St. Cloud and talked about running her own business. Maybe a restaurant, or a nightclub in Florida.
"Allie never would have shot herself," Campbell said, pounding a table, two hours before she got to see Smith at his first court hearing.