Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Police hunt killer after 4th slaying in Tampa

- By Tamara Lush Associated Press

TAMPA — Police and federal agents with rifles checked car trunks, banged on doors and gathered forensic evidence in a Tampa neighborho­od Tuesday as they hunted for the killer believed responsibl­e for gunning down four people for no apparent reason in just over a month.

The normally quiet, working-class Seminole Heights section of bungalows and palm trees was sealed off with yellow crime-scene tape after the latest killing in the neighborho­od — that of a 60-year-old man who was shot from behind as he crossed a street shortly after 5 a.m.

Interim Tampa Police Chief Brian Dugan said it is extremely possible that the killer — or killers — live in the neighborho­od.

“Whoever is doing it, they’re familiar with the neighborho­od and they’re able to vanish very quickly,” Dugan said.

Residents and police have been on edge since Oct. 9, when 22-year-old Benjamin Mitchell was shot to death. Two days later, 32-year-old Monica Hoffa, was slain. And on Oct. 19, Anthony Naiboa, 20, was killed after taking the wrong bus home from his new job.

On Tuesday, Ronald Felton, an unemployed constructi­on worker who volunteere­d at a food bank, was gunned down.

Police cars with flashing lights sat at dozens of intersecti­ons, and one major thoroughfa­re was entirely shut down for much of the day. Law enforcemen­t took over the parking lot at a Baptist church, and a federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives bus was parked at the makeshift command center. Law officers questioned people and took down cell Brian Dugan, interim Tampa police chief

numbers.

“This was a very decent neighborho­od until the last couple of months,” sighed Sherry Street, 50, a cook who has lived in the area for seven years. “Up until recently I used to accidental­ly fall asleep with the door unlocked.”

Street said she has stopped walking to the store, taking the bus or sitting outside to smoke at night. Her friends would often stop by and hang out on her porch to talk, but “now they’re like,I’`m not coming to see you.“’

Her neighbors have also changed their routines. Gone were the Halloween decoration­s of years past. Gone are the dog walkers. And the young woman with the beautiful redheaded twin girls — Street hasn’t seen them in weeks.

“At 7 o’clock you can come out this door and you won’t hear a sound,” she said.

All of October’s victims were either getting on or off a city bus, or were at a bus stop, when they were shot, police said. It was unclear if Tuesday’s victim was near a bus stop.

“When I first divorced and moved here, I stayed in some pretty rough areas. But I’ve never seen anything like this. Maybe I need to consider moving,” Street said, shaking her head. “It’s some crazy person. That’s all you can explain it. Because why? They’re just targeting innocent people and shooting them.”

Police gained a better descriptio­n of the suspect after the fourth killing, saying a witness described him as a black male, 6 feet to 6 foot 2, with a thin build and light complexion. He had a large black pistol and was last seen all in black.

Previously, officers didn’t have much to go on other than a grainy black-andwhite video of a person running near one of the crime scenes.

Bryanna Fox, a criminolog­y professor at the University of South Florida in Tampa, said it is unusual for a serial killer to use a gun.

“A lot of serial killers prefer other methods such as knives or strangulat­ion,” she said.

 ?? OCTAVIO JONES/AP ?? Law enforcemen­t agents investigat­e a fatal shooting in the Seminole Heights neighborho­od in Tampa Tuesday.
OCTAVIO JONES/AP Law enforcemen­t agents investigat­e a fatal shooting in the Seminole Heights neighborho­od in Tampa Tuesday.

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