The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Mom loses second teen son to gun violence

No arrests have been made in shooting death of 15-year-old on Jan. 15.

- By Alexis Stevens alexis.stevens@ajc.com Anyone with informatio­n on the shooting thatkilled Kelvice is asked to contact Atlanta police or submit a tip anonymousl­y to the Crime Stoppers Atlanta tip line at 404-577-8477, online at crimestopp­ersatlanta.org o

In July 2017, Belinda Oliver’s 18-year-old son was shot and killed while selling water bottles outside a southwest Atlanta gas station.

Markeith Oliver had gotten into an argument with people he knew, his mother said. Shots were fired, killing Markeith.

Last week, the same mother got a second harrowing phone call. Her 15-year-old son had been shot and taken to Grady Memorial Hospital. By the time Oliver arrived, her youngest son, Kelvice Roberson Jr., had taken his last breath.

“It’s really been devastatin­g,” Belinda Oliver told The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on. “It’s hard to lose two kids this way. They were sweet boys.”

In 2021, more than 25 kids and teenagers were killed by gun violence in metro Atlanta and several others were injured. That violence is already continuing three weeks into the new year. Oliver said hate-filled people are turning to guns to resolve conflicts.

On Saturday, Atlanta police investigat­ed three deadly shootings, including the one that killed Kelvice.

Kelvice was at the Dunbar Neighborho­od Center on Windsor Street when he and a man were shot about 3:30 p.m. Jan. 15, according to police. The man, whose name was not released, survived his injuries.

“Preliminar­y investigat­ion indicates that the incident was the result of a gun transactio­n gone wrong involving acquain

tances,” Atlanta police said in a news release.

Oliver doesn’t believe her son, a South Atlanta High School freshman, was involved in the gun sale. She can’t understand who would shoot Kelvice in the back of the head and other times in the chest.

The shooting remains under investigat­ion, and no arrests have been made. In her older son’s case, Garrison Carreker, who was also 18 at the time, was arrested and charged with murder. Carreker was later convicted and is serving a 30-year prison sentence, according to the Georgia Department of Correction­s.

Once again, Oliver says she needs help with the costs of a funeral. She has turned to Gofundme and hopes to be able to make a payment to Willie A. Watkins Funeral Home, the same business that handled her older son’s arrangemen­ts.

“I’m still paying off Markeith’s gravesite,” she said. “I’m a single parent working a part-time job.”

 ?? ?? Markeith Oliver (left), 18, was shot to death in July 2017. His 15-year-old brother, Kelvice Roberson Jr., was shot and killed Jan. 15.
Markeith Oliver (left), 18, was shot to death in July 2017. His 15-year-old brother, Kelvice Roberson Jr., was shot and killed Jan. 15.
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