Las Vegas Review-Journal

Gun violence shatters lives in more cities

- By Gillian Flaccus

PORTLAND, Ore. — Cameron Taylor was watching an illegal street race that had attracted hundreds to an intersecti­on in Portland, Oregon, but decided to leave as the crowd got increasing­ly unruly. Moments later, gunfire erupted and Taylor was hit by a stray bullet as he and a friend headed to their car.

Police, who were overwhelme­d with 911 calls about other shootings, couldn’t control multiple street takeovers in the city that night and had trouble finding the victims of three shootings that occurred during the chaos.

“His friend who was with him put him in the car and drove him out to get him to the hospital, but he was not able to make it and that friend called his parents” to say Taylor was dead, family friend Erin Russell told The Associated Press.

Taylor, 20, died Sunday the same day that four high-profile, public shooting rampages in Bend, Oregon, Phoenix, Detroit and Houston drew national headlines. His slaying went largely unnoticed amid the daily toll of gun violence that has come to define Portland and a number of other American cities since the pandemic.

Homicide rates appear to be dropping in some major U.S. cities, such as New York and Chicago, but in others killings are on the rise, particular­ly from guns. In Portland, the homicide rate surged 207 percent since 2019, and there have been more than 800 shootings so far this year. In Phoenix, police Chief Jeri Williams said this week the gun violence was the worst she’d seen in 33 years on the job.

Now, police are on edge heading into Labor Day weekend, with its traditiona­l end-of-summer festivitie­s, and some are adding extra patrols as they brace for more potential violence.

In Portland, police busy with three killings and nine non-fatal shootings in 48 hours couldn’t control three illegal street races last weekend. that attracted hundreds and shut down major intersecti­ons for hours. In Houston, the day after a gunman shot five neighbors, killing three, another man shot two sisters before killing himself.

“Let’s stop talking about our inability to respond to crime in the community. Let’s stop advertisin­g to criminals that they’re going to get away with it,” Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler said, using an expletive at a City Council meeting this week after police Chief Chuck Lovell once more asked for more officers.

The pandemic and the social unrest it caused has also played a role. Eight million Americans became first-time gun owners between 2019 and 2021.

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