Top Stories
South Carolina toddler killed in drive-by shooting
2:51 PM on 11/10/2009
(AP Photo/Burden Family via The Post And Courier)
Bruce Smith, Associated Press Writer
WALTERBORO, S.C. (AP) -- A South Carolina mother fruitlessly tried to shield her 20-month-old toddler from a barrage of bullets in a drive-by shooting that killed the baby and two adults and injured at least five others, relatives said Tuesday.
Relatives said the victims were playing cards Monday night in the front yard of the small beige bungalow in the small town of Walterboro when a car pulled up and opened fire.
"Everybody was sitting outside. Instead of shooting at one guy, they shot at everybody," said Dominique Adams, 21, a cousin who lives nearby. "The mother, she tried to shield the baby, but the bullet went through the baby's head and through the mother's arm."
Colleton County Coroner Richard Harvey said Charles Kittrell, 45, died at the scene. The baby, Shaniyah Burden, and Christopher Powell, 21, died at hospitals.
Adams identified the mother as Aleshia Kittrell, 24, saying she had been taken to Colleton Medical Center, but the hospital did not confirm she was a patient.
The motive for the shootings was unknown, but some relatives and neighbors suspected it was gang-related. No arrests have been reported.
Officers were looking for a black car with one headlight, Police Capt. Ken Dasen said. He referred other questions to the State Law Enforcement Division. A SLED spokeswoman said she couldn't immediately provide details.
Bessie Kittrell, 69, said she lost her son, Charles, a grandson, Christopher, and a great-granddaughter in the shooting. She said she almost lost a second great-grandchild: Powell had put his 8-month-old son inside the house a short time before the shooting.
"It's a good thing he put his baby in the house earlier or they would have killed that one, too," Bessie Kittrell said.
A friend of the family, Pamela Overton, 49, said the shooting was gang-related and that Powell had been shot at before.
"These people here are low-key people, they are common people, they don't bother anybody. The lady in this house raised me. She was like a mother to me," Overton said of Powell's mother.
"The vendetta is probably something stupid, over a girl or something, but this is the second time this young man has been targeted." Overton said. "He was like my littler brother, I loved him. I just saw him the other day. They are very good people, just common folk, hardworking people."
She said the younger man did not live at the house.
Ella Adams, who said she was Powell's aunt, said she did not believe her nephew was being targeted.
"It was a gang, but the people they shot were not in the gang," Adams said. "You're not safe in your own yard. That's what they are saying."
Adams said people often stopped by Kittrell's house to ask to play cards. "Perhaps one of the gang members was in there," she said.
Ginni Keeling, 22, who identified herself as a cousin of the family who lived nearby, said they often played cards and watched television in the front yard of the house.
"I've been over here since I was 13 years old. I ain't never seen anything like this," she said.
Keeling said she'd left the scene about 15 minutes before the shooting with her two young children and she got a call from another relative at the scene of the shooting.
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Follow theGrio on Facebook & Twitter!
Top Stories
-
UN slams Haitian hospitals for charging patients
PORT-AU-PRINCE (AP) - The United Nations has warned that it will cut off shipments of free medicine beginning immediately to any Haitian hospitals that it finds are charging patients...
more
- Colorado Africans forced out of Wal-Mart jobs, claim discrimination
- Anti-abortion billboards claim black children are an endangered species
- Doctor pleads not guilty in Michael Jackson death case
- Actor Gary Coleman pleads guilty to criminal mischief charge
- First lady fights child obesity: 'That's the legacy I want'
- Emmitt Smith, Jerry Rice become football Hall of Famers
- Obama's decline reflects the perils of democracy
- Sade's return is worth the wait
- Can fried chicken just be fried chicken?
- New jobs numbers, but same old story for black workers
- 'Soul Train' 40 years later: Appealing to Americans on both sides of the track
- Haitian children need a future, not a one way ticket out
- Screenwriter Geoffrey Fletcher is 'Precious'
- Ex-NFL star Michael Irvin accused of sexual assault
- Lawyer: Michael Jackson's doctor to surrender Friday
- Soul music legend Bill Withers shines in new documentary
- Diversity reigns in Oscar-nominated directors
- Slideshow: The 25 most influential albums by African-Americans
- Obama to GOP: Let's talk about health care - live
- Move over Ray Nagin, New Orleans has new mayor
- NY Gov. meets with fellow Dems amid scandal rumors
- Senate likely to be less diverse after elections
- Justice Thomas: Some questioning of Supreme Court 'irresponsible'
- CA National Guard gets first black, female leader
- 'The Book of Eli': A not-so-new parable of burnt-out beauty
- Obama musical set to open in Germany
- Five things you didn't know about Kwanzaa (but should)
- Kool & the Gang gives rare concert in Havana
- Africans find unlikely education at Ukraine universities
- 'Fela' brings Nigeria to Broadway
- Bad malaria pills in Africa raise resistance fears
- Denver boy, 9, died after state-benefits error denied him asthma medication
- Among black girls, challenges of fighting obesity go beyond diet
- Obese African-Americans at higher risk of stroke
- Cancer victim sheds light on bone marrow donor crisis
- Hepatitis B and C often ignored as health threat to blacks
- Cory Booker: Black History Month promotes 'understanding'
- Questlove explains what 'Soul Train' means for black Americans
- Tea Party movement lacks diversity, but unified in anti-government fervor
- DNA evidence exonerates NY man of 1976 rape
- Cook defends fried chicken choice for Black History Month menu
- US Baptists charged with kidnapping Haitian children
- Aid groups struggle to get food, water to Haitians
- Mary J. Blige's 'Stronger With Each Tear' is a gem
- The 10 most important black films of the decade
- Alicia Keys' new album proves to be under par
- Happy reading! TheGrio's holiday book wish list
- Invictus: South African story has relevance for America
Facebook
Twitter
YouTube
Myspace
Flickr
Podcast
Wordpress
Linkedin
Last.fm
Tumblr
Identi.ca
Plurk