Porterville Recorder

2 Louisiana slayings likely racially motivated, police say

- By MICHAEL KUNZELMAN Kenneth Gleason

BATON ROUGE, La. — The slayings of two black men in Baton Rouge last week were likely racially motivated, police said Sunday, and a suspect — a 23-year-old white man — was in custody. In both shootings the gunman fired from his car then walked up to the victims as they were lying on the ground and fired again multiple times.

The suspect, Kenneth Gleason, was being held on drug charges. Authoritie­s didn’t immediatel­y have enough evidence to arrest him on charges related to the killings, but the investigat­ion was ongoing, Baton Rouge Sgt. L’jean Mckneely told The Associated Press.

“The victims were ... ambushed,” Mckneely said. “There is a strong possibilit­y that it could be racially motivated.”

Mckneely said shell casings from the shootings linked the two slayings, and a car belonging to Gleason fit the descriptio­n of the vehicle used in the killings. He said authoritie­s had collected other circumstan­tial evidence but he wouldn’t say what it was.

Neither victim had any prior relationsh­ip with Gleason. It wasn’t immediatel­y clear if Gleason had an attorney or when his first court appearance would be.

The shootings happened about five miles from each other. The first occurred Tuesday night when 59-year-old Bruce Cofield, who was homeless, was shot to death. The second happened Thursday night when 49-year-old Donald Smart was gunned down while walking to his job as a dishwasher at a cafe popular with Louisiana State University students, Mckneely said.

Smart’s aunt, Mary Smart, said she was still dealing with the shock of her nephew’s death.

“I’m feeling down and depressed. My nephew, I love him, and he was on his way to work and that makes it so sad,” she said in a telephone interview Sunday. “He was always smiling and hugging everybody. A lot of people knew him.”

Smart had a son and two daughters, she said.

She declined to comment on police allegation­s that her nephew might have been shot because of the color of his skin.

“I cannot say,” she said. “Only God knows.”

No one answered the door at Gleason’s house in a quiet neighborho­od of mostly ranch-style homes with wellkept lawns, located about 10 miles from the sites of the shootings.

“He looks like any clean-cut American kid,” said neighbor Nancy Reynolds, who said she didn’t know Gleason or his family. She said it was “hard to believe this sort of thing is still happening.”

Two of Gleason’s cousins said they couldn’t believe he had anything to do with the killings.

“He had no problems with any person,” said Garrett Sing, 37. “He had black friends, white friends, Asian friends. He made friends with anyone.”

Another cousin, 33-year-old Barton Sing, described Gleason as a “good kid” and recalled how his cousin recently asked him to teach him how to bow hunt.

“He said he never liked guns. That’s why he wanted to get into archery,” Sing said. “He’s the last person I’d think to do something like this.”

Gleason didn’t appear to have any active social media profiles. A spokesman at Louisiana State University said a student by that name attended the university from the fall of 2013 to the fall of 2014 before withdrawin­g. He had transferre­d to LSU from Baton Rouge Community College, the spokesman, Ernie Ballard, said.

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