Less than an hour after she buried him on Wednesday, Hawa Aden stood in a busy Minneapolis parking lot not far from where her son was shot in the head three days before.
A crowd of more than 100 members of her Somali community who had gathered for a vigil stood silent as she talked about 26-year-old Guled Hashi Mohamed. She described a doting husband and father, a college graduate and social worker who wanted to go back to Somalia to help refugees like himself.
Aden said he was a good man who didn't deserve what happened to him but who now deserved justice. She implored members of her community to deliver.
"I know not everyone comes forward. We need you to come forward," she said in Somali, her voice rising. "You know the suffering. This has gone too far! This has to stop!"
Minneapolis police continue to investigate the slaying. Mohamed, of Burnsville, died 11 hours after someone shot him on Sunday night as he sat in a car outside a restaurant at Nicollet and Groveland Avenues S. A passenger in the car drove it to a gas station before Mohamed was rushed to Hennepin County Medical Center.
He was among six people shot during a night of unusually heavy gunfire in Minneapolis. Police said only two of the shootings, at one location in the Warehouse District, were thought to be connected.
Police had made no arrests in Mohamed's killing as of Wednesday and had yet to identify a motive. A police report said several unidentified people witnessed the killing.
Some of Mohamed's relatives and friends urged the community to cooperate with police, while others at the vigil condemned investigators for not promising enough protection to those who come forward. Some said it felt like the police, by saying not enough people are talking, blamed the community