Los Angeles Times

Still waiting for justice

- NICOLE SANTA CRUZ nicole.santacruz@latimes.com For more go to homicide.latimes.com

It’s been four years since Brandon Shorts, 24, died on Christmas after being shot. His father hopes a witness will come forward.

Each day, James Shorts sees his son’s smiling face in photos stacked in drawers and on the kitchen table. There’s a photo of Brandon as a boy, pictures of Brandon at prom.

It’s been four years since the 24-year-old died on Christmas Day after being shot in Chesterfie­ld Square.

“I miss him calling me ‘Pops,’ ” Shorts said Tuesday afternoon as he stood at the spot where his son was shot near South Western and West Florence avenues. A lottery ticket poked out of a blue shirt pocket.

With the killer still at large, Shorts’ hopes for justice hinge on whether more witnesses will come forward and talk to investigat­ors about the shooting. He knows it’s a long shot in a neighborho­od where trust of the police is not instinctua­l. A reward in the case expired last year, but a $50,000 renewal is pending with the City Council.

On Jan. 16, Brandon would have been 29. His mother, Angela Shorts, often spends hours trying to think of anything she forgot to tell detectives. Sometimes she drives past groups of men hanging out in the area where Brandon was shot, and she wonders if any of them know.

“I’m always thinking,” she said. “Every day something different runs through my mind.”

LAPD Det. Dave Ross, who has a picture of Brandon on his desk as a reminder not to give up, hopes the money will put him one step closer to a suspect. Investigat­ors have a trail, but they need a person to identify the shooter.

Brandon was shot on Nov. 18, 2010. It was a sunny day, and class had just let out at Horace Mann Middle School a block away. Kids were walking the streets.

About 3:25 p.m., he was driving south on Western Avenue in a navy blue 2000 Lexus. He was stopped at a light at West Florence Avenue when three people on bikes approached. One person asked Brandon if he was from a gang, then shot into the car.

“It’s not like it was something that happened at 1 o’clock in the morning in a bad neighborho­od,” Ross said.

Ross believes the shooting could have been tied to a housewarmi­ng party that Brandon — who was not a gang member — threw with his girlfriend the previous Sunday.

At the party, a person borrowed Brandon’s car to get food. The car could have been singled out as belonging to a gang member; when Brandon pulled up to the intersecti­on that day, he was in an area occupied by two rival gangs.

At first, his mother said, Brandon pulled through. After three weeks, he was out of his bed, excited to get out of the hospital. On Dec. 23, doctors said his stomach was leaking and filling with air.

Bullet fragments were also found, according to the autopsy report. Brandon needed surgery. His mother watched as Brandon was wheeled into the operating room. He gave her a thumbs up.

His parents prepared for a Christmas with their son. Brandon’s father baked him a sweet potato pie for the occasion.

On Christmas Day, James Shorts got a call. Brandon’s heart had stopped beating.

Anyone with informatio­n is asked to call the Criminal Gang Homicide Division at (213) 485-1383. Those who wish to remain anonymous can call Crime Stoppers at (800) 222-8477.

 ?? Stuart Palley For The Times ?? BRANDON’S SISTER Kendra, father James and mother Angela at the shooting site. Their hopes for justice hinge on whether more witnesses will come forward.
Stuart Palley For The Times BRANDON’S SISTER Kendra, father James and mother Angela at the shooting site. Their hopes for justice hinge on whether more witnesses will come forward.
 ??  ?? BRANDON SHORTS was shot on Nov. 18, 2010. He seemed to be recovering, but his heart stopped five weeks later.
BRANDON SHORTS was shot on Nov. 18, 2010. He seemed to be recovering, but his heart stopped five weeks later.

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