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Authorities are still investigating the circumstances last month that ended with a 14-year-old St. Petersburg, Fla., boy killing his 11-year-old brother in what the older child described as an accidental shooting. But the ingredients of this tragedy — a misplaced gun in the wrong hands — are all too familiar. Gun owners can help by better securing their weapons, especially as the summer vacation season approaches.
The 14-year-old told St. Petersburg police he had found a gun in an alley, then brought it home and accidentally fired the weapon while playing with it April 26. The boy who was killed, Amir Williams, was a sixth-grader who played running back on the St. Pete Little Devils youth football league. Family members said the brothers were close; school was out that day and the boys were home alone with their 13-year-old sister, according to police.
Authorities said the gun had been reported stolen during a vehicle burglary two days earlier. Police are investigating how the gun wound up in the alley. Authorities also said the boy’s mother, who was not at home at the time of the shooting, didn’t know her 14-year-old had found the weapon and that it was inside the home.
This chain of events was a preventable tragedy. As Mike Kovacsev, the St. Petersburg police department’s assistant chief of investigations, said: “Kids make poor decisions occasionally.” Add a firearm to the mix and “it’s a deadly decision,” the assistant chief said. “You can’t take it back. You can’t put the bullet back in the gun.”
Stolen guns, especially from unlocked vehicles, have been a recurring problem throughout the Tampa Bay area for years. St. Petersburg police said about 250 guns were reported stolen in the city last year. In Tampa last year, four out of every five auto burglaries were to vehicles that were left unlocked. And nearly 200 guns were stolen from those unlocked vehicles.
Responsible gun owners don’t unnecessarily leave their firearms in vehicles — locked or unlocked. This is an invitation to every burglar canvassing the neighborhood and jiggling door handles after midnight. When it’s absolutely unavoidable to leave a gun in a vehicle, it should be placed in a lockable gun case or lock box.