Lodi News-Sentinel

San Diego shooting victim remembered by her community

- By Julie Watson

SAN DIEGO — Monique Clark was remembered for her infectious smile by her friends, including entertaine­r Nick Cannon who wrote on social media that “tears can’t express the pain and shock” that she was gunned down over the weekend in a mass shooting at an apartment complex in San Diego.

The 35-year-old mother of three children was the lone person killed by a gunman who shot seven people at a poolside birthday bash Sunday. Police said the shooter was despondent over a recent breakup with a girlfriend.

Cannon, who grew up in San Diego, also posted a photo on Instagram of himself and Clark laughing and sitting on stairs when they were young.

“Such a beautiful spirit with an infectious smile,” the former host of TV’s “America’s Got Talent” wrote. “I have nothing but wonderful memories of this Angel. Tears can’t express the pain and shock. A mother of 3, a sister, a daughter, a cousin, a friend and a Queen... Rest in Paradise.”

Two prayer services were planned Wednesday night at area churches and a vigil was set at the apartment complex to honor Clark, the mother of three daughters — 2, 11 and 13. White flowers and a floral wreath were placed Tuesday outside the pool area.

“She had such a great personalit­y,” said Vincent Howard, who met Clark in high school. “She was always smiling. She was always with her kids and everyone else’s kids. She was like a mother to them all.”

Howard said Clark also helped homeless people, volunteeri­ng often at food drives.

Authoritie­s say Clark was shot and killed by 49-yearold Peter Selis, who called his ex-girlfriend during the attack so she could hear him shooting strangers.

Officers killed Selis in a shootout at the upscale apartment complex that owners describe as a Mediterran­ean village with playground­s, pools, deli and other facilities. The six other victims were expected to survive.

Clark’s family could not be reached for comment. Her mother, Michelle Fuget, wrote on the GoFundMe website that her daughter was beautiful, funny and feisty.

“The grieving process is fresh, raw, and real,” Fuget wrote. “My granddaugh­ters lost their mother, I lost my daughter, her siblings lost their sister, and countless other family members and close friends have lost someone who was taken from us too soon due to a senseless” cowardly act of violence.

Police searched the apartment of Selis, a father who worked as a car mechanic, and found no evidence that he planned an attack, Assistant Chief Brian Ahearn said.

Selis filed for federal bankruptcy protection in October 2015, listing $14,000 in assets and $108,000 in liabilitie­s, according to court records.

Efforts to reach his family and ex-girlfriend were unsuccessf­ul.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States