The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Police still seek answers one month after child's death

One arrested in shooting of 8-year-old Secoriea Turner, but other suspects at large.

- By Joshua Sharpe Joshua.Sharpe@ajc.com

One month later, grief and outrage over the death of 8-year-old Secoriea Turner persists — and suspects remain at large.

The rising third grader, who loved TikTok dance videos and “This Little Light of Mine,” died July 4 when the car she and her mother were in encountere­d a group of armed people blocking a South Atlanta street. The shooting happened near the burned out Wendy’s, since razed, where Rayshard Brooks was killed by police. Protesters upset over his death had been camped out at the site, envisionin­g it a memorial in his honor.

Police have said as many as four people fired in the shooting that killed Secoriea, but have made only one arrest. Julian Conley, 19, charged with aggravated assault and felony murder, has said he witnessed the shooting but didn’t fire.

“At the end of the day, I had nothing to do with it,” Conley told Channel 2 Action News while on

the way to turn himself in.

Members of the core group of demonstrat­ors who had been camped at the Wendy’s site have said they didn’t know the shooters and that they told the armed group to clear the road before the child was shot.

Civil rights attorney Mawuli Davis, who is representi­ng the child’s family, spoke out Tuesday admonishin­g anyone with informatio­n to come forward.

“There is no ‘code of silence’ when an 8-year-old is shot in the back,” the Decatur lawyer tweeted. “This is not ‘cooperatin­g w/ the police,‘ this is protecting our children. Her life mattered & we can’t be silent on that.”

Secoriea’s death happened on a bloody day in Atlanta — 28 people were shot — and yards from the scene of one of the city’s most notorious police shootings in recent years.

Brooks, 27, was shot June 12 while trying to flee the scene with an officer’s Taser. Police had been called to the scene because Brooks, who appeared drunk, had fallen asleep behind the wheel in the Wendy’s drive-thru line. He and officers had a cordial conversati­on for 41 minutes until Officer Garrett Rolfe attempted to place Brooks under arrest for DUI. Brooks struggled with Rolfe, and another officer took the Taser and ran before Rolfe shot him.

Some Atlanta police officers were outraged when Fulton County District Attorney Paul Howard charged Rolfe with felony murder and other charges. Officer Devin

Brosnan was charged with aggravated assault. Both have been released on bond.

APD officers who felt Rolfe and Brosnan had done nothing wrong called out of work in protest and reported feeling afraid they’d be charged if they had to use force. Officers especially seemed to avoid policing around the Wendy’s. For days, armed men brandished guns, threatened journalist­s trying to report from the scene and ran an unauthoriz­ed security checkpoint near the intersecti­on of University Avenue and Pryor Road. It took negotiatio­ns with city leaders, neighborho­od residents and the protesters to get the road cleared.

Experts say all these factors, as well as the violence of July 4, likely contribute­d to the police department’s failure to respond to a report that the road was barricaded before Secoriea was shot.

Police knew for more than an hour before the child was shot that the street was barricaded, according to records obtained by The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on. But the documents suggest police didn’t respond to the scene before the Jeep the child was riding in encountere­d the roadblock around 9:50 p.m.

Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms has said she knew about the roadblock 45 minutes before the shooting, though a spokesman says her office wasn’t aware guns were involved. Interim Police Chief Rodney Bryant learned about the armed blockade roughly 30 minutes before the shooting, according to text messages the AJC obtained.

Had this delayed response happened on a different day, at a different place, in a different summer, officials might be criticized widely for failing to remove the roadblock. But experts told the AJC it was no surprise the police didn’t respond to clear the road, because of the complex and volatile situation in the city and at that intersecti­on.

“It happened on July 4, less than a week after two officers were charged with crimes,” said Georgia State University criminolog­y professor and policing expert Dean Dabney said. “Am I surprised that officers aren’t responding to that area? No.”

Cedric Alexander, former DeKalb County public safety director and policing expert, said the child’s death could be attributed to myriad societal factors that led to the current national unrest. Those factors – including lacking social services, neglected neighborho­ods, police abuse – conspired to create a chaotic and delicate situation in Atlanta, not unlike similar situations in other cities. He said it appeared Atlanta officials and police have been earnest in seeking solutions.

“They’re talking about reform, about social change,” Alexander said. “That’s the path forward.”

As for who’s to blame for the child’s shooting, he put it on whoever pulled the trigger.

“Let’s not forget the shooter,” he said.

There is a $50,000 reward for informatio­n leading to the arrest and conviction of the shooters, Secoriea’s family attorney said.

Tipsters can remain anonymous, and be eligible for the cash reward, by contacting Crime Stoppers Atlanta at 404-577-8477, texting informatio­n to 274637 or visiting the Crime Stoppers website.

 ?? PHOTOS BY ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? Tamiya Hall (left), 13, of Atlanta, is reverent during a community prayer and candleligh­t vigil Tuesday at New Calvary Missionary Baptist Church in Atlanta’s Sylvan Hills community. The vigil took place one month after the shooting death of Secoriea Turner in front of the Wendy’s where Rayshard Brooks was shot and killed by a police officer.
PHOTOS BY ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM Tamiya Hall (left), 13, of Atlanta, is reverent during a community prayer and candleligh­t vigil Tuesday at New Calvary Missionary Baptist Church in Atlanta’s Sylvan Hills community. The vigil took place one month after the shooting death of Secoriea Turner in front of the Wendy’s where Rayshard Brooks was shot and killed by a police officer.
 ??  ?? Shacoria Turner, aunt of Secoriea Turner, wears a mask featuring a photo of Secoriea during the candleligh­t vigil Tuesday.
Shacoria Turner, aunt of Secoriea Turner, wears a mask featuring a photo of Secoriea during the candleligh­t vigil Tuesday.
 ??  ?? Secoriea Turner
Secoriea Turner
 ?? ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? Charmaine Turner, mother of Secoriea Turner, is comforted by her mother, Shanta Turner, during the homegoing service July 15 for Secoriea at New Calvary Missionary Church in Atlanta’s Sylvan Hills community. On July 4, 8-year-old Secoriea was shot and killed in a car.
ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM Charmaine Turner, mother of Secoriea Turner, is comforted by her mother, Shanta Turner, during the homegoing service July 15 for Secoriea at New Calvary Missionary Church in Atlanta’s Sylvan Hills community. On July 4, 8-year-old Secoriea was shot and killed in a car.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States