After 10 shot in one day, Baltimore residents and leaders decry increasingly brazen gun violence: ‘It’s like a norm now’ Baltimore city police forensics technicians document a shooting scene in the 700 block of Rose Street where a gunman fired more than 60 rounds with an assault rifle Tuesday, May 10, 2022. One person died and three others were injured, according to police. (Jerry Jackson/Baltimore Sun/TNS)
A narrow East Baltimore street of marble stoops and boarded up rowhomes, known for drug dealing, is among the latest scenes punctuating the city’s unrelenting gun violence.
Police say a gunman opened fire in the 700 block of Rose Street at midday Tuesday, spraying more than 60 bullets onto the street with a rifle, killing 25-year-old Chrone Cummings and injuring three other people.
Just hours later, across the city, five more people were shot on leafy Boarman Avenue, near Reisterstown Road, where many homes have wide, sometimes sagging, front porches.
Both streets, residents say, have long been scenes of drug dealing and shootings, and they question why city leaders have not done more to prevent violence there. The mass shootings that occurred Tuesday are part of an increasingly common trend in Baltimore where trigger-pullers are injuring and killing more victims in a single incident.
“It’s like a norm now,” said Warren Hawkins, 51, who lives near the East Baltimore shooting scene, of shootings in his neighborhood. “They just tear the (police) tape down and carry on like nothing happened.”
Hawkins grew up in this part of East Baltimore. He said he was arrested numerous times while in “the game,” but the birth of his child changed his outlook on life. He’s afraid to leave home at night now because of the violence, but Tuesday’s shooting unsettled him more because of the time of day and type of weapon.
The gun’s repeated blasts could be picked up by doorbell cameras in homes in nearby Patterson Park and Butchers Hill.
”What you doing with that type of arsenal in a small city? That’s what you go to war with. … They got guns bigger than the police,” Hawkins said.
Police Commissioner Michael Harrison said the East Baltimore shooting “speaks to the brazenness, but it’s also cowardice. It speaks to (the suspect’s) devaluing of human life and shooting indiscriminately down the street, hitting anyone and everyone.”
The block is known to officers as “an area constantly plagued with heavy violence and known for open air narcotic sales,” police have said in charging documents for arrests there.
Police have not provided a possible motive in Cummings’ killing or identified a suspect.
A woman who answered at a number listed for Cummings identified herself only as his fiancee.
“He loved his family,” she said, but declined to comment further, saying his death was too recent.
Across town, near the Boarman Avenue shooting, residents in the community say have been increasingly frustrated by the violence, too.
“The police are not around there doing their job. They show up and leave,” said Cynthia Foote, of the nearby Towanda Neighborhood Association. “They don’t police and that’s a problem.”
Police were called at 9 p.m. to the 2800 block of Boarman where officers found three men who had been shot. Two other victims were found at area hospitals seeking treatment.
Foote said the area is well known for trouble, saying there are “so many balloons up and down Boarman Avenue,” referring to the informal gun violence memorials that have been put up in the area.
“It’s too much,” she said. “This stuff has got to stop.”
Councilwoman Sharon Green Middletown, who represents the neighborhood, said the area has long been troubled.
“I’m very familiar with that section of Boarman and Reisterstown. It’s been a very longstanding problem area, all the way back to the 1970s,” she said.
Middleton said the gun problem isn’t exclusive to Baltimore. It’s a nationwide problem.
The issue, she said, stems from young people increasingly settling disputes with guns. City programs working to address trauma will hopefully discourage such violence, she said.
“There are so many guns out there. Where do you start?” Middleton said. “This is a crisis … but we as a city recognize trauma early.”
City leaders say they are working on several initiatives to address the violence.
Shantay Jackson, director of the Mayor’s Office of Neighborhood Safety and Engagement, said Tuesday, shortly after the Rose Street shooting, that in the coming weeks, the city aims to flood that neighborhood with city and local nonprofit resources.
“Each event of gun violence is traumatic,” she said. “But when you have got multiple folks being victims simultaneously, the trauma is multiplied.”
The effort is part of a larger strategy to address the root causes of violence, Jackson said, “to provide resources, to provide a stabilization effect, to make sure folks know we are not tolerating gun violence anymore.”
James “JT” Timpson, director of community partnerships at Roca Maryland, an anti-violence organization that focuses on mentoring youth, spoke Wednesday at an event for gun violence survivors hosted by the University of Maryland, Baltimore.
He said the alarming increase in brazen, multivictim shootings likely indicates a breakdown of the rules and hierarchies of the streets that once helped keep violence in check.
Harrison said earlier this year that the city has had more incidents in which the offender shot multiple people than at the same time last year.
“The biggest thing is that somebody felt comfortable enough to use an assault rifle in the middle of the day and just shoot down the block,” Timpson said. “It makes you think, like ‘Where do we even live? What comes next?’”
Daniel Webster, director of the Johns Hopkins Center for Gun Violence Prevention and Policy, said researchers are still trying to understand the recent increase in multivictim shootings.
He said there are likely several factors at play, including more people carrying guns. Devices that make semi-automatic weapons fire quicker also are becoming more common.
Webster noted that many shootings result from feuds between rival groups, which could help explain why shooters may target more than one victim. Assuming their targets also are armed and could shoot back, shooters could be acting on a simple calculus, he said: “Shoot them before they shoot you.”
But he warned against thinking about rising gun violence in oversimplified terms that suggest easy solutions. He said addressing such a huge problem requires a combination of large-scale efforts, including both law enforcement action and community violence intervention strategies.
For people working to quell the violence, Timpson, the Roca director, said, the job can become overwhelming.
”But we will not be defeated,” he said. “We have to stand together and work together because these young people are worth it. This city is worth it.”
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