Los Angeles Times

Sacramento shootings leave 3 dead, 6 hurt

A 9- year- old girl and 17- year- old driver are killed in four separate attacks, which police believe are unrelated.

- By Faith E. Pinho

A spate of shootings shook Sacramento over the weekend, leaving two children and one adult dead and several people injured, according to police reports.

The f irst shooting disrupted a Saturday afternoon family gathering at Margarette “Mama” Marks Park in Sacramento’s Del Paso Heights neighborho­od. Several people were struck by gunfire around 1 p. m. during a drive- by shooting, police said.

Among those shot was 9year- old Makaylah “Kay Kay” Brent, who died at the scene. Her 6- year- old cousin and aunt were taken to a nearby hospital, where the woman is in critical condition, according to authoritie­s.

Another man took himself to the hospital with injuries related to the shooting, police said.

About 25 to 30 people had gathered at the park for a spread of ribs, chicken, cornon- the- cob and other barbecued goodies, said Debra Cummings, Makaylah’s cousin.

Community cookouts at Mama Marks are a tradition in the Del Paso Heights neighborho­od. Friends and family had gathered in Saturday’s sweltering heat to celebrate another girl’s birthday when “all hell broke loose,” she said.

Makaylah and another girl were playing tag by the playground, said Cummings, who wasn’t there when the shooting happened but heard about it from other family members. Ashley Brent, the mother of the 6- year- old, dove to protect the girls.

“She thought she would take the bulk of the bullet,” Cummings said. “It’s sickening to even fathom what she had to go through.”

A motive for the shooting is still under investigat­ion,

said Officer Karl Chan, spokesman for the Sacramento Police Department.

“One of the avenues would be to see if this is gangrelate­d, but we don’t have [ anything] confirmed at this point,” Chan said.

Cummings cited “a gang war” as a reason for Saturday’s extensive violence, a pent- up culminatio­n of a diff icult year. The pandemic and its ensuing struggles — children stuck indoors, masking, unemployme­nt fraud — are “intensifyi­ng ” the situation, she said.

“It’s a recipe for disaster,” Cummings said.

Mama Marks Park is one of the few spots in the neighborho­od that children can reach on foot, Cummings said. It’s named after a community matriarch known for handing out hot food to children, people experienci­ng homelessne­ss and other adults.

“The kids felt safe going up to Mama Marks,” Cummings said. “As you can see, it’s not so safe anymore.”

Hours before her death, Makaylah had returned from a camping trip to a family favorite spot at Ca

manche Lake. All she talked about were her Bratz dolls, Cummings. She loved to dress up her braids with beads and paint her nails. She played with glittery slime.

“Makaylah was a child that was full of life. She was a young lady that was just blossoming into little girlyhood,” Cummings said. “It just kills me. I’m still crying. I can’t even fathom that I’ll never see this child again, from seeing her every single day of her life.”

On Monday, Sacramento Mayor Darrell Steinberg condemned the attack in a news conference outside City Hall. In addition to offering his condolence­s, he pledged to invest more in programs targeting youth and disadvanta­ged neighborho­ods.

“It is on us to redefine and, frankly, to expand our definition of what we consider to be a poor city responsibi­lity,” Steinberg said. “Because we haven’t done enough.”

To that end, Councilman Allen Warren, whose district is home to three of the shootings, will make a list of de

mands to the city after the weekend’s events, Mayor Pro Tem Angelique Ashby said. The requests include investing in north Sacramento public libraries, giving ample resources to a city task force on gangs, renovating Mama Marks Park and installing cameras.

Warren did not attend the news conference because he was helping in his district, Ashby said. He posted his condolence­s Sunday on Facebook for “Little Kay Kay” and her family. He did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment Monday.

A little over two hours after the Mama Marks driveby, police responded to reports of a vehicle crashed into a pole in southeast Sacramento, near Jackson Road.

Officers found the driver, a 17- year- old boy, inside the car, dead from a gunshot wound.

And about 6: 45 p. m., another drive- by shooting erupted in North Sacramento near Mabel Street, Chan said. A 17- year- old girl and two men were injured in that attack, but all were ex

pected to survive, authoritie­s said.

Finally, just as the deadly weekend was shuddering to an end, police responded to another call of a vehicle crash in the wee hours of Monday morning, where off icers found a man dead in his car with “at least one lifethreat­ening gunshot wound.”

That shooting also took place in Del Paso Heights, near Dry Creek Road and Harris Avenue.

Police are investigat­ing all four shootings, including whether any were related, Chan said.

“We don’t have any evidence yet indicating that anything is connected at this point,” he said.

The police chief reported 94 rounds f ired over the weekend, Steinberg said Monday, and 10 arrests have been made related to f irearms. The series of attacks could make October a record month for Sacramento.

The Police Department’s most recent crime statistics, which are through August, show 27 homicides this year, up 42% from 19 last year.

 ?? Xavier Mascareñas Sacramento Bee ?? SACRAMENTO police interview people Saturday at Margarette “Mama” Marks Park, where Makaylah Brent, 9, was killed in drive- by shooting during a birthday party. Her cousin, 6, and aunt were wounded.
Xavier Mascareñas Sacramento Bee SACRAMENTO police interview people Saturday at Margarette “Mama” Marks Park, where Makaylah Brent, 9, was killed in drive- by shooting during a birthday party. Her cousin, 6, and aunt were wounded.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States