Los Angeles Times

Name of slain teen is released

Jeremy Galvin, 14, was fatally shot in Boyle Heights after an argument, police say.

- By Christian Martinez

Authoritie­s on Wednesday identified a 14-year-old boy who was killed a day earlier in a shooting in Boyle Heights.

Jeremy Galvin, of Los Angeles, a student at Roosevelt High School, was shot dead Tuesday afternoon in the 2800 block of East 2nd Street, outside Evergreen Recreation Center and across the street from First Street Elementary School.

Officers patrolling in the area around 3:30 p.m. heard shots and responded to the scene, where they found the teenager conscious but barely breathing, LAPD officials told The Times on Tuesday night.

The boy was pronounced dead at the scene.

“Apparently there was some sort of argument between the suspect and the victim” before the shooting, Officer Mike Lopez, a Los Angeles Police Department spokespers­on, said Wednesday.

Police detained a juvenile on suspicion of a firearm violation shortly after the incident, but officials said Wednesday that the arrest was not made in connection with the shooting.

Investigat­ors continue to search for a suspect in the shooting.

The incident came less than 24 hours after a shooting in Wilmington that killed 12-year-old Alexander Alvarado and seriously injured his stepmother and a 9-yearold girl who was struck by a stray bullet while on a school playground nearby, leaving the community on edge.

The LAPD has not apprehende­d suspects or disclosed a motive in that shooting, but Police Chief Michel Moore said Tuesday that “easily dozens” of bullet casings from at least two different-caliber firearms were recovered from the scene, suggesting multiple shooters had opened fire with intent to cause substantia­l harm.

In a statement released Wednesday, L.A. school board member Mónica García and interim schools Supt. Megan K. Reilly expressed sadness over the deaths of the two students.

“We are grief-stricken. With heavy hearts, we join the families in mourning over the tragic events of the past week,” the statement said.

“There are no words to express the pain, the sadness and anger so many of us are feeling at this time.”

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