最新蜜桃影像

最新蜜桃影像
A marked Metropolitan Police Department cruiser sits idel near Triangle Park in Petworth. Police have maintained near-constant surveillance of the intersection of Fourth and Taylor streets since residents there were awakened to the sound of gunshots twice in just one day last month. (Austin R. Ramsey / 最新蜜桃影像)

How a pair of late-night shootings in a leafy DC neighborhood have some residents up in arms

Two, back-to-back reports of gunfire on the same night near one Petworth rowhouse have reignited a simmering controversy among neighbors.

It sounded like thunder.

That鈥檚 what Charles Coleman said he remembers about the night he awoke to gunfire echoing against terraced homes two weeks ago near his home on Shepherd Street NW.

They startled him and his wife from their bed and stirred a frenzy of barking dogs, bedroom lights and sleepy eyes peering past curtains into the early morning darkness.

鈥淭hey just kept going, 鈥榩op, pop, pop,鈥 and it seemed like they wasn鈥檛 going to stop, 鈥 Coleman, 70, said. 鈥淏oy, was it loud.鈥

It was shortly after 1 a.m. on Monday, Sept. 16, according to a Metropolitan Police Department report on the incident. Twenty-two hours later, at 11 p.m. that same Monday night, it happened again 鈥 gunfire tore through the still evening air, a stranger, neighbors say, to the quiet, leafy Petworth neighborhood near a retirement home for veterans.

鈥淭hey just kept going, 鈥榩op, pop, pop,鈥 and it seemed like they wasn鈥檛 going to stop. Boy, was it loud.鈥

All told, 40 shell casings were recovered at the scene of both shootings near Fourth and Taylor streets. There were no reports of injuries, but a home in the 4000 block of Fourth sustained significant property damage, police say.

The two, back-to-back incidents have erupted a simmering controversy among residents in that area about what they see as a growing trend of crime and violence and what police and city officials can and will do about it.

Coleman and others say they鈥檝e grown accustomed to a lifestyle far removed from the seemingly constant clash of gang-related violence to the south and east. Petworth, Coleman said, had its fair share of crime years ago, but not anymore.

鈥淏ack in the mid-鈥90s, sure, D.C. was the murder capital of this country, but, things changed and it got real quiet,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 been peaceful, until now.鈥

Two shootings, 24 hours, one house

Fourth District MPD Cmdr. Randy Griffin says the Sept. 16 shootings were likely tied to a single Fourth Street townhouse 鈥 the same residence that sustained most of the damage that night.

Witnesses of the second incident say a small, white SUV pulled up in front of the home at about 1:06 a.m. and its occupants began firing at a group of people in front of it with a semi-automatic handgun before peeling away.

Hours after the second round of gunfire had been heard, police installed a lightower near the intersection at Fourth and Taylor, and police cruisers could be seen parked at least a block away from every street entrance to that part of the neighborhood.

Griffin said he intends to keep that level of police presence up for a while, if, at the very least, to put residents鈥 minds at ease. But the lightower and extra surveillance is, admittedly, a temporary fix, the commander said, as resources already stretched thin can only support four or five officers on a single city block for so long.

鈥淲e鈥檙e going to have to rely on residents to call in and keep us informed,鈥 he said. 鈥淭oo often we hear complaints about drugs or violence after something like this has happened. We need to hear about it beforehand to put a stop to it.鈥

The shootings appeared to be 鈥渢argeted attacks鈥 upon a resident or residents who live in that house, Griffin added.

MPD executed a search warrant on the property a day after the two shootings, but all that was uncovered were several rounds of unspent ammunition.

Neighbors claim the house is part of an active drug market, though, and that’s precisely what has many of them so upset.

Residents want more

Advisory Neighborhood Commissioner Jonah Goodman hosted a nearly two-hour-long community meeting a week after the shootings where some residents called on the MPD to do more about places they know can harbor criminal activity.

Several residents reported witnessing what appeared to be drug sales in broad daylight near the Fourth Street home and groups of young people carrying weapons in and out of it.

But without direct evidence of guns or drugs inside the residence, Griffin said, there鈥檚 little his officers can do with that information. He urged neighbors to remain vigilant and to call in whatever they witness.

According to Goodman, though, residents don鈥檛 feel like their voices are being heard by the police, whether they call in information or not.

A December 2017 shooting behind a daycare in Petworth wrought a similar neighborhood response, he said. Residents met with the police and cleared the air with some of their concerns.

Since then, the MPD commander, captain and police service area lieutenant who spoke to residents have all since left Ward 4, according to Goodman.

Griffin and the other replacements are fine officers, he said, but they don鈥檛 yet understand the problem areas in the neighborhood.

鈥淭he new team is highly responsive, but admitted they didn鈥檛 think this area was a 鈥榟ot zone鈥 nor did they have any information on past shootings or MPD responses to address this area,鈥 Goodman said.

Even with constant video monitoring, residents near Taylor and Fourth streets in Petworth are frustrated with how little police know about a puzzling spate of shootings last month. (Austin R. Ramsey / 最新蜜桃影像)

In yet another shooting in Petworth last year, Goodman said residents were informed that an MPD camera near the scene did not have the ability to move and did not witness the crime.

The same camera once again came into focus last week. It鈥檚 located less than a block away from the scene of both shootings, but, this time, Griffin said the camera can reposition; it simply wasn鈥檛 pointing in the right direction to see the white SUV, its occupants or any of the individuals who were targeted.

鈥淲e need to create an environment where the expectation after these events is better dialogue and transparency,鈥 Goodman said. 鈥淲e currently are at the far extreme where nothing can be shared publicly and different people and agencies have different pieces of information.鈥

Attorney general steps in

When neighbors have called in to MPD, sometimes their complaints haven鈥檛 turned into formal crime or incident reports.

That鈥檚 a problem, says Monique Cobb, an assistant attorney general in the Office of the Attorney General of the District of Columbia.

Cobb is trying to help the residents near Taylor and Fourth streets bring an end to the crime affiliated with the 4000 block house.

She needs whatever evidence she could bring in front of a judge under Washington鈥檚 little-known Drug-, Firearm-, or Prostitution-Related Nuisance Abatement Law.

The statute allows her office and community members to file lawsuits against property owners who are using their space to sell, store or manufacture illegal drugs; unlawfully store or sell guns; or facilitate prostitution.

Councilmember Brandon Todd, D-Ward 4, addresses members in attendance at a community meeting on gun violence. After a spate of shootings last month, residents near Taylor and Fourth streets in Petworth want police and city officials to do more to stem what they call a growing tide of crime and violence in their neighborhood. (Austin R. Ramsey / 最新蜜桃影像)

In this case, Cobb said, residents near the home believe that there is, at times, firearms being stored inside. The ammunition police uncovered last month could be useful in court, she said, but it鈥檚 not enough; the law clearly states that 鈥渙ne or more guns鈥 must be uncovered.

鈥淚 hate that, because I know of a lot of properties where there are a lot of shootings, and I鈥檓, like, well, we need to go in and do something,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut we may not have jurisdiction, because the statute clearly defines what we can and can鈥檛 do.鈥

Goodman has encouraged neighbors to be mindful of when and what information they bring to the police, not only in order to aid them in making arrests but to bolster the neighborhood鈥檚 case in evicting problem residents.

What鈥檚 next?

Linsay Videnieks, 42, and her husband have lived in their home in the 4000 block of Illinois Avenue NW for nearly two years now.

They moved there partly because of the safe, quiet neighborhood that it was, she said. The two September shootings have thrown a whole new wrench into that equation.

Over the summer, the couple had a new infant child, so it wasn鈥檛 all that unusual for them to be up and caring for the baby at 1 a.m.

鈥淲e just suddenly heard close to nine or 10 shots and my husband called 911,鈥 Videnieks said. 鈥淭he next night, we heard shots again, and we also called it in. I don鈥檛 know what to say 鈥 it鈥檚 usually a very safe neighborhood, at least, we thought.鈥

Charles Coleman said he and his wife have spent evening meals out on their Shepherd Street porch for years now, ever since they both retired.

The recent spate of shootings has the couple rethinking that, though, Coleman said.

鈥淚t just doesn鈥檛 feel safe anymore,鈥 he said.

Austin R. Ramsey

I鈥檓 an investigative journalism fellow at the Investigative Reporting Workshop in Washington, D.C.

My work has concentrated on rural Kentucky communities, told stories about presidents and followed coal ash contaminants in municipal water systems.

I鈥檓 a graduate journalism student at American University where I participate in 最新蜜桃影像ington Post practicum team. I also serve as president of AU鈥檚 School of Communication Graduate Student Council.

In my past adventures, I was a city government newspaper reporter, NPR intern and, once, the mascot for a local radio station; everyone starts somewhere.

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