Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Homeless homicide victims

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sleeps during the day, he said, “with something I can use as a weapon. A steel pipe is good.”

Fort Lauderdale Police Officer Sandi Downs-Keesling, a veteran of working with the city’s homeless, said the message remains the same: Living on the streets can be dangerous.

“People are not normally by themselves. But if I see someone alone, I tell them to make sure that somebody is around,” DownsKeesl­ing said. ”People are staying at least in pairs.”

The deaths of three of the four men slain in October have been linked to Nathaniel Petgrave, 22, a suspected serial killer who is in custody and facing charges of premeditat­ed murder.

In a fourth case, a homeless man who slept near a vacant building in the 1900 block of State Road 7, near Fort Lauderdale, was found beaten to death, according to Broward Sheriff’s deputies. A suspect has been charged in that case.

In what could be yet another homicide involving a homeless person, the body of Darren Butler, 27, was found Tuesday in a burning car in Bicentenni­al Park, 6100 Kimberly Blvd., North Lauderdale. BSO listed his address as “at large.”

Police reports indicated Butler has no permenent address, But his mother said he sometimes stayed with her.

Paul Junor, 58, shared a patch of woods in Plantation with Petgrave. After his arrest, Junor found nearby a freshly dug hole in the ground. Junor suspects it may have been a grave intended for him.

Shaken by his possible brush with death, Junor said he bought a machete to go along with the hunting knife and the black pellet pistol he already had.

Lauderhill Police Officer Shawn Keechle, who has worked as a homeless outreach specialist for three years, said he knows that Sandi Downs-Keesling, Fort Lauderdale police officer

some homeless have weapons for protection. “Knives, box cutters,” he said. “I have heard of firearms, but I have not seen them.”

While only a few among Broward’s homeless may be armed, most everyone takes precaution­s. Most everyone who has been on the street for any length of time has been the victim or crime or abuse.

Lilieth Comrie, 37, found herself homeless about the time she was hearing the news of the recent homicides of the men.

Although she keeps to herself, Comrie said she tries never to be completely alone. She spends time outside the library, or in the waiting room at Broward Health Medical Center.

“I was really scared when I heard [about the killings],” she said. “I don’t want to be sitting somewhere alone and have that happen to me.”

mwclary@sunsentine­l.com Oct. 20: Oct 21: Oct. 21: Oct. 27: Nov. 14:

 ?? MIKE STOCKER/STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Paul Patterson says he is not afraid to be on the streets. He stays awake at night and sleeps during the day.
MIKE STOCKER/STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Paul Patterson says he is not afraid to be on the streets. He stays awake at night and sleeps during the day.

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