Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Girl hit by stray bullet

A 12-year-old girl was injured after a bullet entered her home Thursday, Milwaukee police said.

- Sophie Carson

A 12-year-old girl was injured after a bullet entered her home Thursday afternoon, Milwaukee police said.

Police responded to the shooting at about 12:30 p.m. in the 2500 block of West Capitol Drive. The girl's injuries are not life-threatenin­g and she was not the intended target, police said.

Milwaukee police are looking for suspects. They asked anyone with informatio­n to contact them at (414) 935-7360 or Milwaukee Crime Stoppers at (414) 224TIPS or P3 Tips App.

The girl is the latest in a slew of minors who have suffered gunshot wounds in recent weeks and the second child shot in 24 hours in Milwaukee.

A 17-year-old boy was shot during a basketball game Wednesday evening in Dineen Park on the north side, the Milwaukee County Sheriff 's Office said. He was in critical condition.

And on Tuesday night, a 19-year-old suffered a gunshot wound that was not life-threatenin­g on the city's north side, police said.

Since April 1, at least 15 children under age 18 have been injured by guns in Milwaukee.

Some young children were injured when guns accidental­ly discharged inside their homes; others were teenagers involved in shootings still under investigat­ion.

Among the recent cases: a 6-year-old boy who suffered a graze wound when he picked up a gun and it fired; a 7-yearold boy who was hit by a bullet fired during an argument; a 14-year-old girl struck in a shooting that injured one adult and killed another; two 16-yearold boys who were shot in the same incident; and a 9-year-old boy whose gunshot injury led to the arrests of two people.

Several other teens ages 18 and 19 have been shot since April 1 as well.

In a prominent case last month, four teens, ages 14 to 19, died in a shooting in a home on North 12th Street, along with a 41-year-old woman.

Reggie Moore, director of the Office of Violence Prevention, part of the city health department, called the two latest shootings “senseless acts of gun violence” and urged peace and gun safety heading into the Memorial Day weekend.

The holiday often marks the beginning of warmer weather, which leads to an uptick in violent crime.

“We are calling on everyone in our community to do everything possible to ensure that our homes, parks, and neighborho­ods are safe from gun violence,” Moore said in a statement.

He asked gun owners to keep firearms safely secured and out of reach of children and away from anyone barred from having a gun, and he said the Office of Violence Prevention had an “unwavering commitment” to advocating for the end of gun violence in the city.

“No child should be in fear for their lives anywhere at any time in our community,” Moore said. “Peace is all of our responsibi­lity and we must do everything to ensure that no other family has to experience the injury or loss of a child due to gun violence.”

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