Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Two-year-old boy wounded in Baltimore road rage shooting

- By Regina Garcia Cano

BALTIMORE — An act of road rage left a 2-year-old boy with a gunshot wound in the stomach Saturday in Baltimore, a shooting emblematic of the city’s entrenched gun culture, which has already claimed more than 260 lives and left over 620 people injured this year.

In a news conference hours after the shooting, Baltimore Police Commission­er Michael Harrison said the boy was in “somewhat stable condition” and was expected to survive. Harrison said the suspect remained at large and he asked the man to voluntaril­y surrender to authoritie­s.

“Whoever you are, please turn yourself in. You shot a child. Whoever you thought you were shooting at, you didn’t shoot. You shot a child,” Harrison said. He added he knows many in the community share his “outrage” and asked for their help in identifyin­g the suspect, whom he described as a heavy set black man with dreadlocks.

Police believe the boy was inside a vehicle that honked the horn several times at vehicles that would not move when the light turned green at an intersecti­on in central Baltimore. The vehicle with the boy then drove around the stopped vehicles and turned the corner. Harrison said a gray or silver minivan then caught up to the vehicle with the child and the driver fired his weapon.

Authoritie­s were notified when the boy was taken to a hospital. Officers had responded to the area where the shooting happened around 12:30 a.m. after receiving an alert from the city’s automatic gunshot detection system, but they did not locate a victim or suspect.

Harrison said the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives is offering a $15,000 reward for informatio­n that leads to an arrest. He said authoritie­s are using “every tool in the toolbox” to identify the suspect.

Baltimore has undeniable drug and violent crime challenges. It saw some modest success in reducing its violent crime scourge in 2018, but still exceeded 300 annual homicides for the fourth year in a row. In 2017, the 342 homicides in the city of roughly 612,000 inhabitant­s yielded a punishing homicide rate of 56 per 100,000 people.

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