The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Home where cops shot 92-year-old gets rebirth

- Bill Torpy

There’s almost an otherworld­liness to entering the brick bungalow on Neal Street.

The first thought walking in the doorway is how cramped and dark it is. The burglar bar door that Atlanta narcotics officers franticall­y tore open is long gone. There’s a stumpy, narrow hallway attached to a tiny front room where a terrified 92-year-old Kathryn Johnston stood with her revolver. She died in that spot in a fusillade of 39 bullets after squeezing a shot off at the invaders.

The dirty shag rug where she lay bleeding, and handcuffed, is still there, as is her unplugged maroon LA-ZBoy. The bullet holes in the walls have been patched up by a well-intentione­d worker, although the home’s owner kind of wishes they hadn’t been.

The November 2006 killing of an elderly lady who had nothing to do with the drug trade was one of this century’s most horrifying events in Atlanta. Three cops went to prison for falsifying warrants to enter the house they mistakenly thought was a drug house. Then the house sat vacant in the near northwest Atlanta neighborho­od for 15 years, becoming a shrine to misbegotte­n War on Drugs, as well as urban decay.

Last weekend, a group of

enthusiast­ic workers tore down the rotting wooden ramp that led to Ms. Johnston’s porch. The young men involved in this operation have called themselves the “Waterboyz,” the street-corner entreprene­urs who peddle water to cars. Last year, those selling water came under fire as some of them plying their trade did so too vociferous­ly.

A couple of adults from the area — a former Marine named Marc “KD” Boyd and his roommate, Kacey Venning — stepped in to try to help them peddle their water in a more orderly manner. Boyd and Venning met as AmeriCorps teachers in Atlanta schools and later started an after-school program called HEY! (Helping Empower Youth). That’s how they came to approachin­g the kids on the corners.

At first, they outfitted them with neon vests and instructio­ns on how to politely, and safely, approach cars. Then they went further, throwing in some life lessons, job skills and structure into lives often untethered to order, comfort and direction.

Since last summer, the gatherings have been in the back of Boyd and Venning’s home. But one day, Ms. Johnston’s home will become a place where those programs can happen. That is, after a major renovation. Remember, the place has been rotting away since the night they carried her body away.

A mural of Ms. Johnston that was painted and placed in front of the house was stolen. Boyd said it later showed up in New York.

In the past couple of weeks, crews have cleared debris from around the house to get it ready for interior work.

Standing in the front room where Ms. Johnston died, perhaps 12 feet from the door, Boyd said: “It feels, I dunno, haunted is not the right word. But I respect the place. Even the boys respect it. They watch their mouths here. I put the spirit of Kathryn Johnston to them. They grew up hearing about this.”

Of course, most of them were infants or toddlers when it happened and may not recall much about it, other than knowing that her name is on a nearby city park in a neighborho­od seeing slow renewal as gentrifica­tion pushes from all directions.

“This will mean a lot; this will be like our house,” said Quintaviou­s Williams, a 17-year-old student at Booker T. Washington High who works at Chick-fil-a when he’s not selling water.

Quinton Hosch, also 17 and a Douglass High student, said: “It feels good we’re taking on her legacy. We have to do the right thing. We have to make this something.”

Asked about the afterschoo­l lessons the past year, he said, “I’ve been learning to be a young entreprene­ur and how to adjust to things I’m not used to.”

So what are some of the lessons? I asked.

“Working hard, working on talking skills and how to respect people more,” Hosch said. “I’ve learned that I can be a leader, that people look up to me.”

Boyd will try to muster the troops in some rudimentar­y constructi­on skills while getting the place ready for renewal.

So now the trick is hitting up foundation­s, companies, charities, individual­s — anyone they can think of — for funding to make it happen. Boyd said half the money for the roof has been raised. But the place needs new electrical and waterlines, as well as a ton of other stuff.

had struggled for a place; I think this was meant to be,” said Katie Kissell, a member of HEY!, as we explored the house.

So how’d you come up with this place?

Well, that is, as Paul Harvey used to say, “The rest of the story.”

The home was purchased eight years ago by Rick Warren, an Atlanta man who got a ton of bad press years ago after former Mayor Kasim Reed tried to get him put in jail. Warren had purchased a bunch of properties — like 150 of them — in poor areas, and many of them were falling apart.

Warren owns some long-dilapidate­d apartments around the corner on Joseph E. Lowery Boulevard and is tearing them down, and will allow the Washington High agricultur­e program to use the land for 10 years. He got to talking to some do-gooders, and the name of the HEY! folks came up and ... voila, the property is theirs for five years for $1 a year. In fact, Warren said he’d like to see the program continue there even after that time.

“I thought that it was very important with the history of that property that something positive and life-changing should happen there,” he said. “I didn’t think it’d be this long before we found a partnershi­p.

“Their timing is good because we’re getting cranked up to work on a lot of properties” in the area, said Warren. He added he’ll have subcontrac­tors working nearby, and they can either help with some of the work or get materials at good prices. “If some of the kids think that this could be their calling and want to learn real estate or constructi­on, then that could be a good offshoot.”

The neighbors, who were polled beforehand, agree. “I like to see young people doing things like this,” an elderly lady sitting on her porch told me.

Venning, one of HEY’S co-founders, said she knew of Warren, and “when I heard who it was (donating the house) I thought, ‘This can go either one of two ways.’ But I think people should give him more of a chance than they do.”

She added that it has been an astounding confluence of events occurring when the “WaterBoyz” are setting up shop in Kathryn Johnston’s old house, afforded to them by Rick Warren.

“This is pulling together so many of the polarizing stories from the Westside from the past couple of decades,” Venning said.

“It’s funny how these things circle around,” Warren said.

The guy’s not kidding, is he?

 ??  ??
 ?? BILL TORPY/WILLIAM.TORPY@AJC.COM ?? Young men sell water at the corner of Northside Drive and Joseph E. Boone Boulevard in Atlanta recently.
BILL TORPY/WILLIAM.TORPY@AJC.COM Young men sell water at the corner of Northside Drive and Joseph E. Boone Boulevard in Atlanta recently.
 ?? BILL TORPY/WILLIAM.TORPY@AJC.COM ?? A crew from the group HEY! pulls down the rotten wooden ramp leading to the Westside Atlanta home of Kathryn Johnston, who was killed there by police in 2006.
BILL TORPY/WILLIAM.TORPY@AJC.COM A crew from the group HEY! pulls down the rotten wooden ramp leading to the Westside Atlanta home of Kathryn Johnston, who was killed there by police in 2006.

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