Baltimore Sun

9 people shot, 3 of them killed in Baltimore overnight Monday

- By Jessica Anderson

The shots could be heard from behind the protective Plexiglas.

An employee at the Spot Mini Mart on Quantico Avenue in Baltimore listened as a gunmen fired upon a group of people standing outside the shop Monday evening.

“I heard maybe seven or more,” said the employee who asked not to be identified, citing safety concerns. “I was scared.”

She wasn’t alone. The quadruple shooting left a 25-year-old man dead from a gunshot to the head, and three others wounded, including a 17-year-old boy, a 26-year-old woman, and a 22-year-old man. Baltimore Police said the shooting was one of several overnight Monday, with three people being killed among the nine gunshot victims.

Police spokesman Matt Jablow called the spate of violence “deeply disturbing.”

Police records show that 283 people have been killed in the city so far this year, up from 258 at the same time last year. Another 663 have been wounded in shootings, compared to 553 at this time last year.

“It’s extremely distributi­ng to have that much violence,” especially “shootings in the middle of the street,” said City Councilman Isaac “Yitzy” Schleifer, who chairs the council’s public safety committee.

Schleifer said he went to the Quantico Avenue scene Monday night and later to the Northweste­rn District office to discuss the violence with the captain of the district.

Police said two gunmen fired at people outside the corner store and then fled. Police have not yet released the name of the man who was killed. The others injuries were not life-threatenin­g, they said. “It’s all under investigat­ion. It appears that the situations were targeted,” the councilman said. “We’re just repeatedly seeing the same trigger-pullers wreaking havoc on our communitie­s. It just needs to stop.”

Schleifer said the department must work on improving its clearance rates — when a suspect is arrested in a shooting.

“Over the past couple of years, the clearance rates have decreased and the crime has increased,” he said. “What that tells us is that we have to keep clearing more cases.”

Schleifer said police have cleared 35% of all murders this year, compared with 45% at this time last year.

Police initially thought there were five victims of the mini-mart shooting, after a 22-year-old woman showed up at Sinai Hospital just before 8 p.m. with gunshot wounds to her chest.

Detectives later learned that she was shot in a separate incident in the 5200 block of Fairlawn Avenue in an area of auto body shops. The woman, who has been identified as Keiosha Moore, died at the hospital. Her family members did not respond to a request for comment.

Several hours later, officers responded to the 4700 block of Liberty Heights Ave. just after 1 a.m. Tuesday where they found four injured people, including three suffering gunshot wounds.

Police spokesman Detective Jeremy Silbert said Donnell Dixon, who just turned 19 this month, died in that incident and two others were injured by gunfire. Silbert said a woman suffered an injury to her leg trying to escape, but he didn’t have further details.

Dixon’s family could not be reached. There was a third shooting in the city’s northwest just before 5 p.m. Monday when a 27-year-old man was shot in the 4400 block of Garrison Boulevard. Police said the man was shot in the left thigh and foot and is expected to survive.

Witnesses reported seeing a gray or blue sedan speeding away from the scene, police said.

Jablow said investigat­ions from Monday are ongoing as detectives explore possible connection­s between the incidents. He said detectives have not yet determined a motive in any of the shootings. Anyone with informatio­n about the homicides is asked to call detectives at 410-396-2100 or Metro Crime Stoppers at 1-866-7lockup.

 ?? BARBARA HADDOCK TAYLOR/BALTIMORE SUN ?? T. J. Smith greets supporters on the 1400 block of Argyle Avenue in West Baltimore on Tuesday after announcing he’s running for mayor in 2020. Smith, a former Baltimore Police Department spokesman, said he chose that location because his brother was killed there.
BARBARA HADDOCK TAYLOR/BALTIMORE SUN T. J. Smith greets supporters on the 1400 block of Argyle Avenue in West Baltimore on Tuesday after announcing he’s running for mayor in 2020. Smith, a former Baltimore Police Department spokesman, said he chose that location because his brother was killed there.

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