The Columbus Dispatch

Police share video of suspect in death of teen girl

- Eric Lagatta

Columbus police have released surveillan­ce footage of a male juvenile they say is the suspected gunman who fired a hail of bullets that killed a 17-year-old girl and sent a crowd of teens scattering in June outside a city recreation center on the Far East Side.

Nearly six months after Makenzi Ridley was killed on June 24, the video with no audio was posted Tuesday on the Columbus Division of Police’s Youtube page and shared via the agency’s Twitter account.

Captured from what appears to be a surveillan­ce camera atop the Far East Community Center, the 41-second video shows two angles of the young male whom police say they believe is the suspect.

The male is first seen walking outside the recreation center on Lattimer Drive south of East Livingston Avenue. After nearly 10 seconds, the video cuts to another angle showing a parking lot with soccer fields in the background where several young people flee following the eruption of gunfire, including the alleged gunman himself who looks to be holding a weapon.

The video does not show the young male firing the gun into the crowd.

More than 100 people, most of them juveniles, were gathered outside the recreation center before the shots were fired around 8:45 p.m., police have said.

Among them was Ridley, a 17-yearold Northland High School graduate and budding entreprene­ur who owned her own boutique. The teenager’s mother told The Dispatch the next day that her daughter had been shot in her left arm, and the bullet traveled through her body, striking her heart.

Ridley was transporte­d to Mount Carmel East Hospital, where she died after 9 .m.

At a news conference the next day outside the recreation center, Columbus Police Chief Elaine Bryant, on her first official day on the job, said that some witnesses were coming forward. But any informatio­n they provided has not yet led to an arrest.

Sgt. James Fuqua, a police spokesman, did not have an explanatio­n on Tuesday for why six months had passed since the fatal shooting before the surveillan­ce video was publicly released. The video was posted to the police division’s social media sites with no media release issued and no news conference such as the one held June 25 by Bryant and Mayor Andrew J. Ginther.

Ridley is among 28 people under the age of 20 who have been killed in Columbus in 2021. Sixteen of them were minors, including two sibling children slain Dec. 7 in the parking lot of a Southeast Side apartment complex along with their mother’s 22-year-old boyfriend in what the lead homicide investigat­or has said was a “targeted assassinat­ion.”

Detectives have said they believe two suspects were behind that triple homicide, but no arrests have been made two weeks later. Photos of the suspect vehicle involved in the incident were released a week after the shooting, but it’s unclear if Columbus police obtained or plan to release surveillan­ce video at the apartment complex that captured the suspects or the shooting.

Even before the triple homicide, a record number of people had already been killed in 2021 in Columbus for the second year in a row. Last year’s homicide record was surpassed on Nov. 22, and the death toll continues to climb with 10 days left in the year.

In a media release Tuesday night, Columbus police announced that the 195th homicide of the year in Columbus had been reached after a 58-year-old man shot earlier this month had died Sunday of his injuries.

Anthony Merchant was shot multiple times in the stomach, right arm and right leg on Dec. 2 on the West Side.

Columbus police, who were dispatched around 2:21 a.m. on a report of a shooting in the 300 block of Midland Avenue found Merchant about three streets to the west at the corner of South Highland Avenue and Sheridan Street. Columbus medics took him to Ohiohealth Grant Medical Center.

Merchant was reported to be in critical yet stable condition, and police said they expected him to survive his injuries. But Merchant died at 12:24 a.m. Sunday after more than two weeks in the hospital.

No suspects have been identified in Merchant’s death.

As the violence rages, city leaders, including Ginther, have repeatedly spoken to the need for the community to come together to not only share informatio­n on crimes with police, but to engage in positive ways with youth.

Anyone with informatio­n on Ridley’s death or any homicide can call the Columbus Division of Police’s homicide unit at 614-645-4730 or report an anonymous tip to the Central Ohio Crime Stoppers at 614-461-8477. elagatta@dispatch.com. @Ericlagatt­a

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States