Chattanooga Times Free Press

Homicide victim was police official’s brother

- BY JULIET LINDERMAN

BALTIMORE — T.J. Smith is the face of Baltimore police: He’s the spokesman pleading with the public at news conference­s to put down their guns, call in a tip or keep an eye on wily teenagers.

His pleas to end the relentless bloodshed in this city turned personal when his younger brother became one of Baltimore’s latest homicide victims.

Dionay Smith, 24, was found dead inside his apartment Sunday from a gunshot wound. He was the city’s 173rd homicide victim this year; there have been three more killings since.

“To many, he will be #173, but to me and my family, he’s Dion, a brother, a son, a father, a friend, a nephew, and a kind soul,” Smith wrote in a Facebook post Tuesday night.

On Wednesday, Smith called a news conference at police headquarte­rs to speak about his brother, whom he’d texted with just last week: their children — Dionay’s twins and T.J.’s son — share the same birthday, and they’d exchanged well wishes. T.J. had taught Dionay how to tie a neck tie; he bought him his first suit to wear to job interviews.

“I’ve been on crime scenes, I’ve heard the wails of family members when they discover it’s their loved one who is deceased … on Sunday evening, one of the names that came to me was way too familiar,” Smith wrote.

Baltimore has been in the throes of a crime surge for more than two years, and the homicide rate this year is again on track to break records. From January to June, the city saw 170 homicides — just two fewer killings than the same time period in 1993, when the city had about 100,000 more residents than it does today. A close second for the bloodiest year was 2015, which recorded 344 homicides, with a population of just 622,000.

The violence in Baltimore began to dramatical­ly spike following the death of Freddie Gray, a 25-yearold black man whose neck was broken in the back of a police transport wagon. Gray’s death inspired protests, rioting and a weeklong citywide curfew, and prompted then-mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake to fire the sitting police commission­er, Anthony Batts. Six officers were charged in connection with his death; but after more than a year of legal proceeding­s, half of the officers were acquitted, and the remaining cases dropped.

Some residents blamed the violence on police, accusing them of taking a hands-off approach to fighting crime. Others pointed a finger at a flood of pilfered prescripti­on drugs that entered the black market after pharmacies were looted during the riots.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States