Boston Herald

Calm hits Tampa after suspect bust

Cops say he helped ‘bag’ self

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TAMPA, Fla. — After enduring almost two months of fear, a Tampa neighborho­od breathed a sigh of relief yesterday after authoritie­s announced the arrest of a suspected serial killer, a recent college graduate who police say gave himself away after asking a co-worker to hold a bag containing a handgun.

Howell Emanuel Donaldson, who was working as crew chief at a McDonald’s, was charged with four counts of first-degree murder in a string of shootings that targeted people near bus stops.

“We had a community that was on edge,” Mayor Bob Buckhorn said. “Today the light shines. The darkness is over. This community begins the healing process.”

Neighbors of the 24-yearold — who lived in a different area of Tampa than where the slayings took place — said they recently saw him playing basketball with his younger brother in the driveway of the family’s suburban home. Now they’re watching news of him on television, puzzled as to how a kid who went to college in New York on a basketball scholarshi­p ended up behind bars.

“He’s very nice. He waves, very polite,” said neighbor Kelly Fabian, who said she walked Donaldson to school when he was younger. “Quiet kid. It’s a shocker.”

Donaldson is scheduled to make a first court appearance today in Hillsborou­gh County.

The arrest, which happened Tuesday night, brought immense relief to the anxious neighborho­od of Seminole Heights, which had stopped many outdoor activities since the first death on Oct. 9. Two more fatal shootings happened in the weeks that followed, and residents were so scared that police escorted children while they trick-or-treated. The fourth killing happened earlier this month.

The crack in the case came Tuesday when Donaldson brought a bag containing a loaded Glock .40-caliber handgun to McDonald’s and asked a co-worker to hold it while he went across the street, authoritie­s said.

Restaurant workers thought Donaldson’s request was odd. When he left, they reported the gun to a police officer who was doing paperwork there, setting off an investigat­ion. When he returned to the restaurant, officers were waiting.

In addition to matching shell casings found at the shootings, authoritie­s said location data from Donaldson’s cellphone put him at the scene of at least three of the killings.

Authoritie­s have not been able to determine why Donaldson chose the Seminole Heights neighborho­od and he hasn’t shed any light on his motive.

On Oct. 11, 32-year-old Monica Hoffa was slain, followed on Oct. 19 by 20-year-old Anthony Naiboa, who was killed after taking the wrong bus home from his new job. The final victim, 60-year-old Ronald Felton, was killed Nov. 14.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? EVIDENCE HUNT: Police officers process evidence at a McDonald’s in the Ybor City part of Tampa after the arrest of Howell Emanuel Donaldson, inset, a man suspected in the recent serial killings in the area.
AP PHOTO EVIDENCE HUNT: Police officers process evidence at a McDonald’s in the Ybor City part of Tampa after the arrest of Howell Emanuel Donaldson, inset, a man suspected in the recent serial killings in the area.

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