Because of an error on the D.C. police Web site, a July 14 article included an incorrect photograph. Michael Dorsey, who was found killed last week in Northeast Washington, is pictured here.
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Each Victim In the City's Violent July Has a Story
The case is under investigation.
-- Robert Samuels
July 5: Darryl Hill
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Darryl Hill's family and friends sat at the dinner table Wednesday preparing for his funeral.
They ate pasta in the house in the 1400 block of Duncan Street NE and recalled his love for his family and his pets.
Hill was shot and killed on the street where he grew up. He was 30. Three friends who were with him also were shot, but they survived.
Ernestine Hill, Darryl's mother, heard the gunshots that Wednesday night. When she stepped out the door to see what was happening, she saw a neighbor running up the staircase: Her boy was hit.
Hill had been rising above his criminal past, relatives said. By 16, he had been convicted of voluntary manslaughter, court records show. He also pleaded guilty to a drug charge in 2003.
"We don't like to talk about those things," said his mother, a receptionist. "He was getting better, and he was maturing."
In December, he proposed to Clareca Brandon, a 31-year-old data analyst whom he had known since middle school. She said he planned to start a job at the Department of Public Works on Monday.
-- Robert Samuels
July 7: John Jackson
The last moments of John Jackson's life sounded, at first, like fireworks. His mother had gone to bed, and her son, as usual, had left their home in the 1400 block of 18th Place SE to hang in the courtyard across the street with friends.
But the mini-explosions at 2 a.m. startled Shirley Boyd: "Ain't no little kids shooting no firecrackers this time of the morning," she told her husband.
Her son, actually a nephew whom she'd raised since he was a baby, had been killed in a hail of what appears to be automatic weapons fire.
"There were 20 bullets in his chest," Boyd said, recounting what she had heard from police, neighbors and friends.
"We don't know that for sure," said her daughter, Cynthia Boyd, as the two finished preparing the obituary for his funeral at Grace Memorial Baptist Church in Southeast.
Jackson, 26, had been an usher there as well as a member of the junior choir and missionary circle that visited members who were sick and unable to attend regular services.
The night he was killed, Jackson had come in to chat with his parents about 11 o'clock.
"He kissed me and said he loved me and went back out the door," she said. "That was it."
The next time Boyd saw her son, he was being taken away on a stretcher.
-- Robert E. Pierre
July 7: Jason R. Lyons
As her 4-year-old grandson, Jaronte, ambled up the carpeted stairs this week to tell her she had a phone call, Deborah Levi smiled. The calls have been nonstop and all about the same thing: the shooting death of her son and Jaronte's father, Jason Rasheed Lyons, 24.
Her grandson played as usual, mostly unaware of what had occurred, helping to brighten his grandmother's face. But Levi, fully aware that her son wouldn't be coming home, recalled his good deeds.
The church choir. His stint on the mayor's youth leadership institute. Football, basketball and baseball with the Boys and Girls Club. And the award he'd received in 2002 as one of the high achievers in his GED class at the University of the District of Columbia.
"My brother was not a gangster or a street thug," said Ayana Elliott, 30. "He was a peaceful person."
Lyons's family moved to the District from Takoma Park in the late 1980s, and Elliott was initially afraid of what she'd heard about Southeast. She was put at ease, however, when they pulled up to their home in the Penn Branch neighborhood, a quiet, middle-class community just off Pennsylvania Avenue.
Police said her son was just a few blocks from his home in the 1400 block of 34th Street SE when he was shot numerous times. Investigators found him behind a dumpster.
"The streets are treacherous," Levi said.
-- Robert E. Pierre
July 8: Chris Crowder
He had every reason to bemoan his fate. In 1990, he was paralyzed after being shot while walking through a playground in his Shaw neighborhood.
But Chris Crowder did not allow his disability to dampen his penchant for taking on politicians and embracing causes. In his motorized wheelchair, he rolled into community meetings across the city, voicing his many opinions.
More recently, Crowder, 44, aspired to run for mayor, not because he believed he'd win but to raise issues affecting the poor and disenfranchised that he believed other candidates would avoid.
He was shot to death early Saturday in a small community park around the corner from his apartment. A second victim in the shooting, a man whose identity the police have not revealed, is in critical condition.
All week, neighbors have paused before the shrine that Crowder's friends have put up to memorialize him, a few feet from where he died. "Just the other day, you walked with us, talked with us," two mourners wrote on a card. "Your parting has left an aching void this world could never fill."
-- Paul Schwartzman
July 9: Alan Senitt
Alan Senitt's most recent visit to Washington began a few weeks ago, when he started an internship with a political fundraising committee. The activist from Britain knew the city well, particularly Georgetown, where he was killed in a robbery early Sunday.
"He was just an outstanding individual," said Daniel Sacker, a close friend who was with Senitt before the attack. "He was going places."
Sacker, 24, said he, Senitt and a female friend had gone to a movie late Saturday in Georgetown and parted company shortly after 1 a.m.
Police said Senitt, 27, was escorting the woman home when they were confronted by three robbers; at least one had a gun, and one had a knife. One attempted to sexually assault the woman as another stabbed Senitt. Then they fled, riding away in a car driven by a woman. Four suspects later were arrested. Police said they had used one of the victims' ATM cards to get $500, in $20 bills, which they split.
Senitt had no crime concerns, at least not in Georgetown, Sacker said. "We're from London, and people here think of London as being safe. And people there think of Georgetown as being safe."
-- Karlyn Barker
July 10: Sandra Mitchell
The porch light was still on at Sandra Mitchell's house this week, along with splatters of what appeared to be blood on the door, covered in a few places by red tape labeled "evidence."
Mitchell, 46, died after police responded to her home in the 4300 block of Dubois Place SE to investigate a stabbing. When they arrived at 8:49 p.m., they found Mitchell, grievously wounded in the neck.
At midafternoon Wednesday, a man who said he was stopping in the neighborhood to see his mother said he had heard about the killing but did not know Mitchell. Another neighbor said that she thought Mitchell had lived there for about six months but that she could not be sure. All that seemed certain was the blood on the door and the burning light on the porch.
-- Robert E. Pierre
July 11: Laquanda Johnson
Laquanda Johnson lost her friend, her "brother" Terence Jones, to gunfire two years ago. This week, Johnson lost her own life.
Gunned down early Tuesday, she was killed in the same area of 22nd Street SE where Jones was killed in April 2004.
A 20-year-old man was arrested hours after Johnson died and has been charged with first-degree murder. But the case is not closed. Detectives are investigating the possibility that Johnson's killing could be tied to the recent trial of Lennell Cooper, 26, who was convicted of killing Johnson's friend.
"That's why they killed my baby," Johnson's mother said yesterday in a telephone interview. "You try to do right and try to stand for something and do what a whole lot of people don't -- and that's step up to the plate and help the law."
Having now fled her Prince George's County home in fear, she spoke on the condition that her name not be used.
She blames the authorities, who she said left her daughter vulnerable once the trial was over. The U.S. attorney's office said the family was relocated with the help of the government.
Johnson, 24, who hung out on the block, did not see Jones's killing, her mother said. But she was named as a possible witness. She was not called to testify.
Johnson was out early Tuesday when she was approached by Alphonce Little, who lives down the street in the 3400 block of 22nd Street SE and who was once friendly with Johnson, her mother said.
Little approached Johnson and another woman and told them, "Don't go anywhere. I'll be right back," according to the charging documents in the case.
Little retrieved a gun he had hidden, returned and opened fire on the women, according to the police account of his statement. The other woman survived. Johnson died at Washington Hospital Center. Little, identified by a witness, was arrested later that morning.
-- Henri E. Cauvin
July 12: Michael Dorsey
Police said Michael Glen Dorsey, 23, lived in the 5700 block of Eagle Street, a narrow, secluded thoroughfare lined with small, well-kept homes off East Capitol Street in Capitol Heights.
At 2:05 a.m. Wednesday, he was found shot multiple times inside a dismal row of two-story brick apartments in the 1900 block of Gallaudet Street NE.
He was five miles -- and, it seemed, a long way -- from home.
-- Michael E. Ruane
