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View Full Version : Very Sad to see Evil over take the City



sailsmen
12-17-2011, 08:37 PM
I-10 crash victim was a popular New Orleans barber
Published: Saturday, December 17, 2011, 6:00 PM Updated: Saturday, December 17, 2011, 8:15 PM
By Katy Reckdahl, The Times-Picayune The Times-Picayune

Mitchell Baptiste, 48, who died in a fiery hit-and-run crash Friday on the Pontchartrain Expressway, was on his way to pick up his brother at Louis Armstrong International Airport so the two could attend their mother's funeral Saturday.


View full sizeTed Jackson, The Times-Picayune archiveMitchell Baptiste is seen working as a barber in the background of this photograph taken at Danny's Divine Designs in August 2009.
Baptiste was a popular barber who in recent years had operated out of Danny's Divine Designs on South Broad Street near Cleveland Avenue. He always had more than enough paying customers to keep him busy, but he was big-hearted and would cut customers' hair for free when money was tight, friends said.

On Saturday morning, Darnell Prejean arrived at the visitation for Baptiste's mother, Brina Mae White Bond, only to hear that his friend had been killed Friday. Tears rolled down his cheeks as he tried to come to grips with the news. "I can't believe it," he said. "Mitch just cut my hair at 3 o'clock Thursday afternoon."

Because of his skills, kindness and wit, Baptiste kept customers forever, friends said. He had cut Prejean's hair since the 42-year-old was a college student. He was the only barber Richard George, 46, has ever had.

"He spoiled all of his customers: They didn't want to go nowhere but him," said Frank Clark, 60, who employed Baptiste for 15 years at Candy's Beauty and Barber Shop on South Broad.

"Every customer was special to him. Love just flowed from him through the clippers," said Errol Duvernay, 51, a friend and customer for nearly 25 years.


View full sizeDaniel Monteverde, The Times-PicayuneThe accident in the westbound lanes of the Pontchartrain Expressway caused the interstate to be closed in both directions Friday morning.
About 10:45 a.m. on Friday, Baptiste's Nissan was hit from the rear on the expressway by a driver in a black Nissan. The collision, which occurred near City Park Avenue, spun Baptiste's car into a concrete barrier and a light pole. Passers-by tried to break inside his locked car and pull him out, but it burst into flames with him trapped inside, burning his body beyond recognition.

The black Nissan that caused the wreck didn't stop. Interstate 10 was closed in both directions for hours while crews worked to clear the scene.

Word spread among some of Baptiste's friends and longtime customers Friday. Others, like Prejean, heard the news as they arrived Saturday at St. Stephen Full Gospel Baptist Church in eastern New Orleans, thinking they had come to help Baptiste bury his mother.

Baptiste, though a dapper dresser, had never owned a suit until this past week, when he bought one for his mother's funeral. The new suit had been a main topic of the week's conversation, said Prejean and Duvernay.

"Get a camera," he had told friends he knew would be at his mother's send-off. Duvernay was slated to sing a solo. And Baptiste had called George at 5:30 a.m. on Friday, asking him to be a pallbearer.

The two had spoken only briefly, just long enough to nail down the arrangements, said George, who lives on Broad near Baptiste's home. He saw his friend every morning as Baptiste walked his dog and put his young niece on the school bus, George said.

Bond's death wasn't unexpected, funeral-goers said. She had been sick, and doctors told her she likely would not survive surgery. So she called together the family to say goodbye, made out her will and planned her entire funeral -- down to the outfit she'd wear in her coffin.

"It was all planned," Duvernay said. "And then this happened."

George said the scene from the highway kept playing through his mind, first the crash and then the awful fire.

The friends wondered about the hit-and-run driver, who was going fast enough to push Baptiste's car into the light pole with such force it ignited. And who was the driver, they wondered, speculating that maybe he was young and scared, drunk, or driving a stolen car.

"It seems so cold that he kept going," George said.

Duvernay said that after the family's "double dose" of sorrow, everyone hoped for some closure.

"Whoever you are," Duvernay pleaded, "just do the right thing and come forward."

Katy Reckdahl can be reached at kreckdahl@timespicayune.com or 504.826.3396.



© 2011 NOLA.com. All rights reserved.

Every day in the news are pure evil acts of every kind reported. Very sad to see evil take over a City you grew up in.

guspech750
12-17-2011, 11:16 PM
Awfully crazy stupid world we live in. :(


---
- Sent from my iPhone
Eaton Swap + 4.10's = Wreeeeeeeeeedom!!

Shaijack
12-18-2011, 12:07 AM
True Billy this place is getting worst. When Me and Haggis strat our country stuff like this will not happen.
Rules for New Orleans
1-Never go into the city
2-If you go keep your gun in your hand
3-Never walk alone in dark areas
4-There is nothing in New Orleans I need so I don't go there
5-If in doubt see rule number one and five

sailsmen
12-18-2011, 09:38 PM
Two-year-old killed in New Orleans shooting
Published: Sunday, December 18, 2011, 8:27 PM
By Stephen Babcock, The Times-Picayune The Times-Picayune


View full size
ELIOT KAMENITZ / THE TIMES-PICAYUNE New Orleans Police Chief Ronal Serpas arrives on the scene where a two year old is shot and killed in a crossfire which wounded another man Erato Street near South Galvez on Sunday, December 19, 2011.
A toddler playing outside at the B.W. Cooper housing development was shot to death amid a violent Sunday in New Orleans.

Keria Holmes, 2, died after being transported to a local hospital. A 20-year-old man, who police believe may have been the intended target, also was shot in the incident, but appeared to survive the attack, said Officer Frank Robertson III, New Orleans Police Department spokesman.

Four other people, including a 9-year-old, were wounded in separate shootings Sunday.

Police believe the incidents that injured the children are unrelated, but they bear striking similarities. In both attacks, the child victims were outside playing Sunday afternoon, and ended up caught in the middle of gunshots as cars drove by and bullets started flying. A motive or suspects have yet to be identified in the either case.

In the attack that claimed the girl's life, a group of children were playing in a courtyard between two of the housing complex's buildings at 3300 Erato St. around 4:45 p.m., Robertson said. A white car and a gray SUV approached on Erato and people in the vehicles began firing.

The two-year-old was shot in the head. She was taken to a local hospital, where she was pronounced dead some time before 6 p.m., police said. The 20-year-old man also was shot multiple times; police said he was in surgery Sunday evening.

Police are looking for the vehicles, and have yet to identify any suspects.

Addressing reporters at the scene, Police Superintendent Ronal Serpas said he talked to the parents of the child.

"They're devastated," he said. "They're crushed.

Serpas called attention to the 20-year-old's arrest record, saying that he had prior arrests on gun and drug charges. Serpas spent a good bit of the news conference criticizing the courts for allowing people arrested on gun charges to go free.

"The NOPD is arresting a whole lot of dangerous people," Serpas said. "But somehow or another, with the drive-through window of justice on Broad and Tulane, they're right back out on the streets here and tonight we have a two-year-old child who lost her life."

Serpas said criminals think that when they get to court, "Oh, they'll get back out. Oh, they'll get a break."

"Well this baby didn't get a break," he said.

In the eastern New Orleans incident, a group of children were gathered on Salem Street around 3:30 p.m. A male wearing dark-colored clothing came running through the yard of the house, and started shooting at a gold Pontiac that was driving on the street. Caught between the bullets, the 9-year-old boy was wounded once in the side, and once in the arm. After being hit, the boy ran up the street toward his home, and collapsed in the house's yard. The shooters fled north on Salem Street toward Morrison Road.

Later Sunday night, a male and female victim were wounded near the corner of St. Claude and Tupelo Streets. The victims were at a block party when a gunman approached and opened fire. The female victim was taken to the hospital by EMS, and the male was taken by a private vehicle, Robertson said. Their conditions were unknown.

Serpas asked residents to call CrimeStoppers -- 504.822.1111 or toll free at 877.903.7867 * -- with information about the shootings, which both occurred in crowded areas in broad daylight.

"This happened in the street," he said. "This happened where people saw it. This happened where people in this community can once again stand up and say, 'We're not going to stand for this.'"



Child Killed On Erato

New Orleans Police Chief Ronal Serpas talks about the murder of two year old child caught in the crossfire of gunmen.
Watch video



© 2011 NOLA.com. All rights reserved.

guspech750
12-18-2011, 09:42 PM
:(................ What a fked up world.................:(


---
- Sent from my iPhone
Eaton Swap + 4.10's = Wreeeeeeeeeedom!!

bigmerc'03
12-18-2011, 09:53 PM
thats why i never returned after the hurricane ......i miss new orleans for the food and drinks BUT its not enough to make me wanna return so sorry to here this kind of stuff is still going on