Web Search powered by YAHOO! SEARCH
05.15.2008 9:13 pm

Friday editorial: One day, five killings

Gano Shooting May 11On Monday, five people were killed in less than six hours on the streets of St. Louis. Seen from a gated suburban community or a small country town, that may reinforce a view that the city is no place for decent folks.

Seen from the front porch of one of the city’s growing expanse of stable neighborhoods, five killings in six hours is an aberration, a freakish coincidence. Crime is down drastically in the city, particularly crimes against persons — murder, rape, assault and robbery.

Homicides are up this year. But five in six hours? In broad daylight? Hardened city cops see Monday’s killings as crimes of exceptional callousness, committed under conditions a community should not ignore.

The crimes:

• During the lunch hour that day — 12:30 p.m., according to the police report — three men walked into a discount store in Old North St. Louis. They demanded money. They blasted away at a man and a woman occupying an office behind the front counter, killing both. They shot a woman seated at the counter helping a customer. She was five months pregnant. She survived.

• Fifteen minutes later, on Gano Street in the Fairgrounds neighborhood three miles to the north, three men were standing in front of a house talking. One walked into the gangway beside the vacant house next door, where he was shot in the back and under his left armpit. He collapsed in the front yard and died. The shooter stepped out of the gangway and fired several shots at the other two men, striking one in the head, killing him.

• The fifth killing occurred three blocks away, on North Grand Boulevard, at 7:11 p.m. Two men approached the victim on the street. They began firing. The victim ran into a store and collapsed in an aisle, bleeding from his face and a puncture wound to his upper chest. He was lifeless when paramedics arrived.

Most murder victims are killed by people they know, in domestic disputes or arguments over money or drugs. Stranger-on-stranger killings, as apparently occurred at the Rock Bottom Wholesale store in Old North St. Louis, are rarer.

Old North St. Louis is a neighborhood on the move — a beehive of activity that in recent years has become a model of community involvement. Rough blocks are being smoothed out with new and renovated housing. What happened on May 12 had to be a sickening blow.

The Fairgrounds neighborhood is a different story. Although the vast majority of its people are honest and law abiding, this area is held hostage by a small group of dangerous young men. Gangs and guns are a fact of life.

The St. Louis Police Department made arrests in about 55 percent of the city’s homicides in the last three years. Police already have two suspects under arrest for the Old North St. Louis killings. The department is beginning a major initiative to reduce gun violence, a broad partnership under the guidance of the Police Executive Research Forum, a national law enforcement think tank. The focus will be on the Wells-Goodfellow neighborhood in the northwest corner of the city, the site of 14 homicides in 2007.

Five killings in six hours do not mean that the city has become frighteningly dangerous, but they can’t be shrugged off, either. Rooting out the violence and the conditions that foster violence will require a commitment from the entire community: Relying on police and prosecutors to put bad guys away will be futile if we fail to create schools that work, provide housing that is safe and infuse all children with hope.

(Photo: Laurie Skrivan, Post-Dispatch. Medics work on one of the victims of the Gano Street shooting.)

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (No Ratings Yet)
Loading ... Loading ...
9 comments

Comments are closed.

It would be extremely Christian to witness missionaries take as much interest in urban area as they do third world countries.

People taking genuine interest, caring about and helping these without anything in return would go a long way in changing the hearts of many in urban areas.

— D. Walker
12:05 am May 16th, 2008

Law abiding individuals have a legal obligation to take care of themzelves. That means they should take personal responsibility to do so.
Take the training necessary to get a concealed carry permit. Only when the good guys out gun the bad guys will the violent crime take a nose dive.

It is pretty simple.

And statistics bear me out.

— johnh
4:58 am May 16th, 2008

As to the first comment, there are many Christian activities of various churches in the surrounding area directed at North St. Louis, whether meeting basic needs of food and clothing, educational needs through mentoring, and employment training. The same is true for Meacham Park. They do it quietly and without fanfare. While commenting on this issue, the same is true of ministries directed to inmates in state prisons and local jails.

— Helen Louise
6:48 am May 16th, 2008

Condolences to the families of the victims. Unfortunately this will quickly devolve into a portrayal of the hardware as the villian and the shooters as helpless victims of poverty and joblessness. Why were these shooters not at work doing the jobs that the illegal invaders are praised for doing? When will our culture stop making excuses and start raising expectations? How many births of tomorrow’s shooters will the Great Society enable today?

— Bb
9:21 am May 16th, 2008

The Fairgrounds Park neighborhood is quite familiar with the sound of gunfire, although it has traditionally been after dark. Unfortunately, the officers and park rangers who patrol that area are overmatched by the problem, and, the weapons being carried by these criminals.

— RHarnack
12:29 pm May 16th, 2008

Thank you, Helen Louise, for your upbeat comments. There are indeed many Christian organizations, and those of other faiths, or mixed, or secular, all actively reaching out to the less fortunate in our community. My wife is busy at “Fantastic Finds” right now, selling donated goods to help put uniforms and shoes on school children and to support a refuge for battered women. Yesterday she worked as an “interpreter” (docent) at the Missouri Historical Society. We’ll each leave a of pint of blood with the Red Cross Tuesday.

Anyone can help, each in his/her own way, and there’s plenty to be done.

As to the shootings, unfortunately many city dwellers, mostly young males, have carried weapons for years. Last “bad” gun (a big old revolver) that I spotted, and kept my mouth shut and guided my friends away from, was in front of Union Station. Our police are seldom outgunned, and with a recent money influx, they’re going to have new body armor. There are a few SKS and AK47’s out there but they aren’t very concealable, so you don’t often hear about them any more, and will probably never see one on the street.

— Robert H
4:59 pm May 16th, 2008

Anyone in the “St. Loo”ser area should be issued a weapon of some sorts

free of charge to protect themselves.

We now have the “Castle Law”, use it folks.

Let the whining & moaning begin from liberals who are afarid that

that bad ole gun will, somehow by it’s self, jump out and shoot someone.

— Old Sarge
7:30 am May 17th, 2008

Why does the Post have to use a terrible day like this to promote class warfare? The first line of the second sentence begins with “Seen from a gated suburban community.” The percentage of people in the suburbs living in a gated community is miniscule. I live in the suburbs — not in a gated community — and I have a tremendous amount of sympathy for the innocent people having to tolerate this type of crime in their communities. I imagine 99.9 percent of all ST. Louisians fell the same way — regardless of where they live. Man, we sure need another daily paper in this town.

— GTB
9:44 am May 17th, 2008

HOW do you create schools that work? HOW do you provide housing that is safe? HOW do you “infuse all children with hope? The STL P-D editorial staff is good for telling everyone what they need to do, but not how to do it. There are answers. Alas, many of them are not politically correct. Until people stop making excuses and take a strong stand, nothing is going to change.

P.S. As far as violent crime, wait until summer gets here. You ain’t seen nothing yet.

— Renee
12:03 am May 18th, 2008