Chicago Sun-Times

TEARS FOR BOLINGBROO­K VICTIMS

- BY ALICIA FABBRE AND SUSAN SARKAUSKAS

The sister of one of the three people shot to death in a Bolingbroo­k home invasion shared how her family has been forever changed by Sunday’s deadly attack.

“What I am most upset about is ... this stole opportunit­ies,” Tomika Reed said through tears at a vigil Wednesday. “Opportunit­ies to see the babies grow up, to see my brother get married.

“The whole experience took away from our family,” she said as others cried with her.

Reed’s brother, Cartez Daniels, died in the home on Lee Lane. Samiya Shelton-Tillman, 17, and Sanai Daniels, 9, also were killed. Cartez Daniels’ fiancee and the children’s mother, Tania Stewart, was wounded and remains in stable condition at a hospital, authoritie­s said.

Two boys, ages 3 and 14, who were in the home at the time of the shooting were not hurt. Authoritie­s said the boys were staying with family members. A family friend said the boys were also Stewart’s children.

More than 100 people, including many students, gathered at the DuPage Township Center for the vigil.

“What kind of world are we in where there’s that kind of hate?” Reed said. My brother’s “fiancee is in the hospital, and she has to wake up to the realizatio­n that half of her children and the love of her life is gone.”

Byrion Montgomery, 17, was arrested and charged with murder in connection with the shootings. Bolingbroo­k police said Montgomery and Shelton-Tillman had been dating. Montgomery, who remains in custody on $20 million bail, is also charged with attempted murder, home invasion, aggravated battery and aggravated unlawful use of a weapon. He has pleaded not guilty.

Montgomery and Shelton-Tillman were students at Bolingbroo­k High School, officials said.

“She was like a sister to me,” 15-year-old Dezylin Hope said of Shelton-Tillman.

“She was just sweet.”

Hope and many other students left notes for the family of the victims after the vigil. Others released a handful of balloons to remember the victims.

Chemecca Mobley, a friend of Tania Stewart, sobbed quietly as Reed talked about Daniels and the lives cut short by Sunday’s shooting.

“It just hurts,” she said, as she described her friend as an outgoing person who loved her children.

She said the couple typically set aside Sundays as a family day with the children and other family members.

“He was a caring son,” Carter Taylor said of his son, Cartez Daniels, in a phone interview. “He cared about family above everything,” and that included Shelton-Tillman, his stepdaught­er whom he loved like his own.

Several community pastors prayed for an end to violence throughout the vigil and urged those in attendance to show love and support to one another.

Pointing to the crowd, Bolingbroo­k Mayor Mary Alexander-Basta told Reed that the community stands with her and her family.

“Everyone here today is a support for you,” she said. “You are not alone.”

 ?? JOHN STARKS/DAILY HERALD ?? Tomika Reed, sister of Cartez Daniels, is embraced by Liz Campbell on Wednesday at a vigil at DuPage Township Center for the victims of Sunday’s shooting.
JOHN STARKS/DAILY HERALD Tomika Reed, sister of Cartez Daniels, is embraced by Liz Campbell on Wednesday at a vigil at DuPage Township Center for the victims of Sunday’s shooting.

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