Albuquerque Journal

Six killed by two shooters working as team

49 shots fired in cookout massacre

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WILKINSBUR­G, Pa. — Two gunmen working as a team fatally shot five people including a pregnant woman and critically wounded two others at a backyard cookout, with one attacker using a rifle to shoot the victims in the head as they were driven in his direction, a prosecutor said Thursday.

“The murders were planned. They were calculated, brutal,” District Attorney Stephen Zappala said of the Wednesday night shootings.

The medical examiner officially ruled the death of the fetus a homicide Thursday afternoon, bringing the fatalities to six.

The gunmen appeared to have targeted one or two of the victims, said Zappala, who said drugs as a motive hadn’t been ruled out.

Police said they have no suspects. Allegheny County Executive Rich Fitzgerald urged witnesses to step forward.

Four women, one of them eight months’ pregnant, and a man were killed as they rushed toward the back porch to seek cover from a gunman firing a .40-caliber pistol at as many as 15 adults, playing cards and having a late-night cookout.

That steered the victims toward the rear porch and door of the house, where an accomplice armed with a 7.62 mm rifle similar to an AK-47 shot them from behind a chain-link fence less than 10 feet from the porch, Zappala said. Neither weapon has been found.

The man with the rif le aimed high throughout the barrage of bullets. Four of the dead were found on the tiny back porch.

“They were all head shots,” Zappala said.

The dead included three siblings, Brittany Powell, 27, who lived at the home; Jerry Shelton, 35; and Chanetta Powell, 25. The other two were Shada Mahone, 26, and Tina Shelton, 37.

“My whole family was massacred,” said Jessica Shelton, the mother of the siblings and aunt of the other two killed.

“It doesn’t make sense to take people’s lives like that,” said Jessica Shelton, who had been at the party earlier in the evening.

Her daughter Chanetta was eight months’ pregnant, she said. She said her son is one of the critically wounded victims.

One of her grandchild­ren was at the party, saw his mother lying dead, and ran upstairs, Shelton said.

“He said he didn’t want the bad men to get him,” she said.

She said she didn’t know why anyone at the party would have been targeted.

All of the victims were hit by shots from the rifle, and none from gunfire from the pistol, which “looked like a distractio­n almost,” said agent Chris Taylor, of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives. He said 49 shots were fired in total, 31 from the rifle. All of the victims had multiple wounds.

“It looks like right now they were all fleeing toward the back door of the residence when the second gunman fired from the side of the yard,” said Lt. Andrew Schurman of the Allegheny County homicide unit. “They all seemed to get caught on the back porch.”

Carl Morris and his son, Robert, were leaving their house across the street when they heard a volley of three shots, a pause, then gunfire lasting more than a minute.

Robert Morris said he saw children run onto the small back porch and heard someone scream, “Mommy, Mommy!”

“It was terrible,” Robert Morris said.

 ?? MICHAEL HENNINGER/PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE/AP ?? A woman reacts at the scene of a deadly shooting in Wilkinsbur­g, Pa., on Thursday. Police say multiple people were killed and several injured late Wednesday in suburban Pittsburgh.
MICHAEL HENNINGER/PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE/AP A woman reacts at the scene of a deadly shooting in Wilkinsbur­g, Pa., on Thursday. Police say multiple people were killed and several injured late Wednesday in suburban Pittsburgh.

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