Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Detroit plays tough in accidental shootings involving kids

- By Kristi Tanner and Katrease Stafford

Detroit Free Press DETROIT >> The father raced to the bedroom, cried out and punched the walls.

“Oh, my God. What do?” he screamed.

Christophe­r Head found his 9-year-old son, Daylen, dead in a bedroom in the west-side Detroit home, a single shotgun blast to the boy’s head. He’d been playing video games, according to police reports. Christophe­r Head didn’t pull the trigger, but he would soon be the one going to prison.

No U.S. city has seen as many young children die in gun accidents as Detroit. And no other court system has dealt out sentences as severe for the grownups who were involved.

Head’s crime was leaving a firearm untended. His 10-year-old daughter found the shotgun and pulled the trigger while emulating a video game.

Prosecutor­s charged him with second-degree murder, involuntar­y manslaught­er, child abuse and gun crimes, including being a felon in possession of a firearm. They also charged him as a habitual offender because of his string of previous conviction­s for extortion and drug offenses. A jury acquitted Head of second-degree murder, but convicted him of the rest.

He was sentenced to a maximum of 52 years in prison, the longest sentence imposed over a child’s accidental gun death over the past three years, an analysis by the USA TODAY Network and The Associated Press found. The organizati­ons examined 152 gun accidents from 2014 to 2016 in which a child under age 12 either killed themselves or was shot and killed by another child.

The earliest Head will walk free is 2043, when he’ll be 72.

In an interview from prison, Head said he kept the shotgun for protection. He said he got off parole, got a house and two jobs: “I was doing what a father was supposed to do,” he told the Detroit Free Press. did y’all

“I just keep rewinding and rewinding,” he said about the accident and his subsequent sentence. “I don’t deserve this.”

Daylen was one of six children under 12 who died in accidental shootings in Detroit during the three-year span studied by the news organizati­ons.

As a result of those shootings, a mother, father, several grandparen­ts and two family friends faced jail, probation and some of the lengthiest prison sentences in the country after fatal gun accidents, according to the analysis.

“These serious injuries and deaths are completely, totally, and absolutely preventabl­e,” Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy said in an email to the Free Press.

She said it’s unacceptab­le for children to be killed or injured because gun owners leave their firearms unsecured and within reach.

“These children are just as dead as those who are unfortunat­ely caught up in random violence on our streets. We should all demand that there be accountabi­lity for the preventabl­e deaths of these children,” she said in the email.

“For me, it isn’t even a hard call.”

Worthy said her office does not charge parents or guardians if they took precaution­s to have the weapon locked and secured.

Elsewhere in Michigan, and the rest of the country, the news organizati­ons found little uniformity in prosecutor­s’ decisions about whether to punish adults in such cases. About half of the 152 fatal accidents the USA TODAY Network and AP examined led to criminal charges, usually against parents who authoritie­s said should have been watching their children more closely or secured their guns more carefully.

Only about half the people convicted of a crime ended up in prison or jail; when they did, the typical sentence was around four years.

There was no clear pattern for charging responsibl­e adults or gun owners, the exception being cases that involved people who had previously been convicted of felonies and were prohibited from having a gun — as in four of the six cases in Detroit.

The city has struggled for decades with some of the nation’s highest violent crime rates, leading prosecutor­s to draw a hard line on accidental shootings involving minors.

Wayne County 3rd Circuit Judge Qiana Lillard told the Free Press that since 2014, she has presided over at least two cases involving children who have died after handling improperly stored firearms.

“With the culture of violence in the city, kids are becoming collateral damage, and it’s just tragic,” Lillard said.

Jamel Witcher Jr., 4, was shot in the chest in Detroit by his 4-year-old cousin in 2014 after she found a loaded rifle in a bedroom of a home where the children were playing. Police said the girl found the gun near a bed. It wasn’t locked, nor was it put away and out of the reach of children, police said.

According to court records, Jamel’s grandmothe­r, her estranged husband and Jamel’s grandfathe­r, who were living together, each faced charges, including manslaught­er and felon in possession of a firearm. The grandmothe­r and grandfathe­r got two years in prison. The estranged husband got probation after agreeing to cooperate with the prosecutor.

All three had previous felony conviction­s, making it illegal for them to possess a gun, regardless of how it was stored. While Jamel’s parents said the gun should have been properly secured, they did not agree with Worthy’s decision to charge.

“I feel like it was an accident,” Adrian Tubbs, his mother, said in early 2014.

Outside Detroit, no charges were filed in any of the five other Michigan cases researched by the news organizati­ons.

In Ypsilanti Township, 35 miles west of Detroit, prosecutor­s declined to bring charges in the accidental shooting death of 3-yearold Jamari Moore in November.

Jamari was playing with his younger brother and the 10-yearold son of his mother’s boyfriend in a bedroom. According to police records, the 10-year-old found a loaded and holstered handgun on the closet shelf about 5 ½ feet off the ground — within arm’s reach of the 5-foot-tall fifth-grader.

 ?? REGINA H. BOONE — DETROIT FREE PRESS VIA AP ?? This photo shows Adrian Tubbs, 23, left and her fiance, Jamel Witcher Sr., 24, in Detroit. Their four-year-old son Jamel Witcher Jr., was shot accidental­ly Thursday by his four-year-old first cousin Ja’Nyla Poe, also four-years-old. They are adamant...
REGINA H. BOONE — DETROIT FREE PRESS VIA AP This photo shows Adrian Tubbs, 23, left and her fiance, Jamel Witcher Sr., 24, in Detroit. Their four-year-old son Jamel Witcher Jr., was shot accidental­ly Thursday by his four-year-old first cousin Ja’Nyla Poe, also four-years-old. They are adamant...
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MDOC VIA AP

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