South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

‘It is absolutely a crisis’

From toddlers to teenagers, more kids are dying by gunfire during pandemic. And it’s getting worse.

- By Jack Healy

Kendall Munson was so worried about the gun violence in her neighborho­od on Chicago’s South Side that she sent her sons to live with their grandparen­ts outside Atlanta.

But death found them anyway.

On Dec. 9, her goofy, football-loving 11-year-old son, Elyjah, and some friends were walking to a gas station for after-school snacks when one of Elyjah’s best friends, a 12-year-old, pulled a gun from a backpack and shot Elyjah in the head.

It was the second time last year that the family had been jolted by gun violence.

Two weeks before Elyjah was killed, his 5-year-old cousin, Khalis Eberhart, was fatally shot after a 3-year-old cousin found a gun under a sofa cushion.

“It’s easy to get a gun. It’s easy for our kids to get one,” said Munson, who believes that her son’s death was not intentiona­l. “When you’re a kid frivolousl­y playing with something you think is a toy, this is what happens.”

The number of children and teenagers killed by gunfire has risen sharply during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Researcher­s describe the increase as a fatal consequenc­e of rising nationwide homicide rates, untreated traumas of COVID-19 and a surge of pandemic gun-buying that is putting more children into close contact with guns — both as victims and those wielding guns.

The toll

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that the rate of gun deaths of children age 14 and younger rose by roughly

50% from the end of 2019 to the end of 2020.

And it appears the toll grew worse last year.

More than 1,500 children and teenagers younger than

18 were killed in homicides and accidental shootings last year, compared with about

1,380 in 2020, according to the Gun Violence Archive, a publicly sourced database that tracks gun deaths in real time before official government counts.

Toddlers are discoverin­g guns under piles of clothes and between couch cushions. Teenagers are obtaining untraceabl­e ghost guns made from online kits. Middle school students are carrying handguns for protection.

While children die of gunfire at far lower rates than adults, the rise in young lives cut short has raised alarms with police officials and families across the country.

“We keep seeing the same thing over and over again,” said Keith Meadows, the police chief in South Fulton, Georgia, where two children, including Khalis Eberhart, have recently died of accidental shootings. “When the pandemic hit, we just had this big influx of people getting gun permits. People are buying these weapons without getting the right type of education.”

Police department­s and cities across the country are struggling to intervene.

Larger cities like Philadelph­ia, tormented by rising youth violence, are plowing millions into violencein­tervention programs, youth leadership groups and community groups.

In December, Meadows held a gun safety course that

50 parents attended, some with their children in tow.

A day later, a 3-year-old boy was wounded after he found a gun under a bed and shot himself in the stomach.

Much of the toll is concentrat­ed in a few dozen big cities, with Chicago, Philadelph­ia, Houston and Milwaukee at the top of the list, according to the Gun Violence Archive.

But few places in the U.S. go unscathed.

In Sedalia, a city of 22,000 in central Missouri, 4-yearold Andre Walker fatally shot himself at home after finding the loaded family handgun. D’Shaunti Kyanni Hunter, 17, was found shot to death in a rural Georgia cemetery.

After a gunman killed four teenagers at Oxford High School in Michigan, the local prosecutor filed involuntar­y manslaught­er charges against the parents of the 15-year-old suspect. The prosecutor accused the teenager’s parents of buying him the handgun as a Christmas present and leaving it available to him in an unlocked bedroom drawer, even as school officials raised alarms about their son’s violent fantasies.

The parents have pleaded not guilty.

The anger

But for the most part, adult gun owners are not charged when their weapons are involved in shootings that kill children and teenagers, legal experts say. And some families said they were frustrated that the shootings — which disproport­ionately affect Black and Hispanic children and teenagers in poorer neighborho­ods — did not seem to stir much wider concern.

“It’s like a normal thing,” said Kim Sipes, whose

16-year-old nephew, Ramon Sosa, was shot and killed with his grandmothe­r over the summer in Oklahoma City.

A 16-year-old has been charged in their deaths, reflecting how the number of youths 19 and younger who commit homicides rose by nearly 20% between 2019 and 2020, according to FBI crime data.

Sipes said she wanted Oklahoma legislator­s to pass laws that would prevent

16-year-olds from gaining access to handguns but said she had little hope that the killings would galvanize them to act. Even a fundraisin­g website her family set up to cover funeral costs struggled to reach one-third of the $10,000 goal.

Researcher­s say public health agencies and schools strained by two years of the pandemic are now falling behind in addressing the roots of the current surge in violence affecting children.

“We hoped that as life resumed, things would go back to the way they were,” said Sarah Burd-Sharps, senior director of research at Everytown for Gun Safety, a gun control group funded largely by Michael Bloomberg, the former New York mayor. “It’s clearly not happening.”

Instead, anti-violence activists say a sense of helplessne­ss

and anger has taken root.

“Is it COVID? Is it mental disorders? Are these guns getting into the hands of younger kids?” asked Malissa Thomas-St. Clair, an activist in Columbus, Ohio, who co-founded the group Mothers of Murdered Columbus Children after a 14-year-old boy shot and killed his 2-year-old nephew last year. “There’s nowhere you can hide.”

A recent tally from Mike McLively, who directs the Community Violence Initiative at the gun reform group Giffords, found that 15 states have pledged nearly $700 million toward gun violence prevention. The pandemic interrupte­d many of these programs, and cities are now scrambling to catch up.

“It is absolutely a crisis,” said Erica Atwood, senior director of Philadelph­ia’s Office of Policy and Strategic Initiative­s for Criminal Justice and Public Safety. More than 30 children and teenagers died in shootings in the Philadelph­ia area last year, according to the Gun Violence Archive.

The violence

In Columbus, Ohio’s booming capital, activists say a rise of chaotic, sometimes inexplicab­le eruptions of gun violence aimed at children has left neighborho­ods reeling and children too frightened to walk home from bus stops.

In 2019, three children 17 and younger were killed by gunfire. That number rose to 20 in 2020 and 17 last year,

according to police statistics.

Bereaved families have begun organizing to demand action from the police and community leaders.

Mothers march in matching orange T-shirts and wave posters of their slain children. They visited impromptu vigils at murder scenes until one was shot up over the summer.

In Columbus, 2021 began with the murder of two young children.

Late on New Year’s Day of last year, Ava Williams, 9, and her sister, Alyse, 6, were shot and killed by their father, who had spent the pandemic in and out of work and hoarding guns.

“I was worried about COVID,” said Vanecia Kirkland, the girls’ mother, who described her daughters as loving and inseparabl­e sisters. “I should have been worried about their father.”

Then in early December came the grim news that another pair of children had been killed.

Demetrius Wall’Neal, a football-loving 9-year-old, and his 6-year-old sister, Londynn, who never left home without a favorite sparkly purse, were climbing into a car with their mother’s boyfriend when gunmen walked up and sprayed the car with bullets, killing all three.

“How could you kill two babies?” their grandmothe­r Jessica Jones wondered as she sat inside a bakery one morning in the Columbus suburb where Demetrius had played football. “I just don’t understand. When does it end?”

 ?? NICK HAGEN/THE NEW YORK TIMES 2021 ?? Mourners bring flowers and balloons Dec. 1 to a makeshift memorial at Oxford High School in Michigan. A 15-year-old gunman killed four students the day before. The suspect’s parents also were charged in the case.
NICK HAGEN/THE NEW YORK TIMES 2021 Mourners bring flowers and balloons Dec. 1 to a makeshift memorial at Oxford High School in Michigan. A 15-year-old gunman killed four students the day before. The suspect’s parents also were charged in the case.
 ?? ALYSSA NOEL POINTER/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A makeshift memorial along Westbury Road in Riverdale, Ga., near the place Elyjah Munson, 11, was shot and killed while walking home from school.
ALYSSA NOEL POINTER/THE NEW YORK TIMES A makeshift memorial along Westbury Road in Riverdale, Ga., near the place Elyjah Munson, 11, was shot and killed while walking home from school.
 ?? MADDIE MCGARVEY/THE NEW YORK TIMES 2021 ?? Malissa Thomas-St. Clair co-founded a nonprofit made up of mothers who have lost a child to violence in Columbus, Ohio.
MADDIE MCGARVEY/THE NEW YORK TIMES 2021 Malissa Thomas-St. Clair co-founded a nonprofit made up of mothers who have lost a child to violence in Columbus, Ohio.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States