Police Identify Sept. 19 Shooting Victim as Joel Johnson

Joel Johnson, 21, of Southeast DC, was identified as the victim of a Sept. 19 shooting in the 4200 block of First Street Southeast. Police believe Johnson was killed during the course of an attempted robbery.

The press release from MPD follows the jump.
Read more

Keyon Caldwell Sentenced to 15 Years in PCP Killing

Keyon Caldwell was sentenced to 15 years in prison and five years of supervised release on Sept. 21 for what prosecutors say was a PCP-fueled killing.

Prosecutors say Caldwell killed Draynell Henderson on April 11 at Henderson’s home at 662 24th St N.E. A witness told officers that Caldwell was inside Henderson’s apartment and the two men, who were longtime friends, decided to smoke PCP together.

The witness was in a bedroom and heard gunshots from the living room. When the witness opened the door to the living room 15 minutes later, prosecutors say, Henderson was lying on the living room floor in a pool of blood, gasping for breath.Read more

Andrew Williams Charged in Shooting Death of Junon Snead

Andrew Wesley Williams, a Northeast DC man also known as “Drew” and “Barbershop,” pleaded innocent Sept. 13 in the shooting death of Junon Tyree Snead last May.

Williams, 25, was charged Sept. 5 with four counts, including first-degree murder while armed and three weapons charges.

Snead, 30, was killed on May 14 in Northeast DC. According to MPD, the cause of death was a single gunshot wound to the head. The murder was caught on surveillance tape, which shows Snead engaged in conversation with someone. The person in the video swings at Snead, who backs away, but the person pursues him and then shoots him.

Williams was arrested on Dec. 27. He is scheduled to appear in court next on Jan. 9 for a status hearing. The trial has been set for June 10 before Judge Ronna Beck.

The charging documents are after the jump. Read more

Ronald Pickett Sentenced in Shooting Death of Girlfriend Vanessa McGee

Ronald G. Pickett was sentenced to almost 11 years in prison last month, after pleading guilty to the shooting death of his girlfriend, Vanessa McGee.
Read more

Wednesday Shooting Victim Identified as Gregory Darnell Troxler

MPD has identified a 21-year-old man shot and killed Wednesday afternoon in Northeast DC as Gregory Darnell Troxler.

A press release from MPD is after the jump.
Read more

An Update from Homicide Watch DC

Two weeks ago we marked an incredible milestone: we reached the $40,000 fundraising goal to keep Homicide Watch DC running.

Our goal is to get the site up and running again as soon as possible. We’ve had a tremendous number of applications from students applying for the internship and we’re going through each application trying to find you, our community, the best person to do the job.

As we finalize the hiring, we’ll start updating the site again starting this week. Those of you who have sent emails and photos to help fill in what we’ve missed, thank you. We’ll add that information in as soon as possible. And please, if you’re looking at the site and you see something that’s missing, leave a comment here or email me (laura@homicidewatch.org)

Thanks, again, for your support of Homicide Watch DC.

Sincerely,
Laura Amico, Editor

Homicide Watch DC: Now Accepting Applications for Reporting Internships

Are you a journalism student looking for an innovative platform to learn on? A legal studies student interested in learning more about how our community interacts with the criminal justice system? Can you report and write on deadline?

Homicide Watch DC is now hiring interns for a special one year student reporting lab. We believe that structured beat reporting tools like Homicide Watch provide excellent learning experiences for students because the platform guides reporters through the reporting process step-by-step. Students working on the platform will also learn to build a community around news products, data collection and reporting, and more.
Read more

Mark every death. Remember every victim. Follow every case.

Twenty-seven days.
1,038 backers.
 $40,743.

Together we have said: Mark every death. Remember every victim. Follow every case. Together we have said: Save Homicide Watch DC. Together we have said: Training young journalists in crime coverage is necessary. Together we have said: We care.

On Aug 14 we didn’t know whether Homicide Watch DC could keep going. Today, thanks to those 1,038 people who backed Homicide Watch DC on Kickstarter, we are so excited by the continuation and transformation of the site.

We are joyful and we are grateful. We have witnessed incredible generosity, not just of dollars, but of support, effort, and emotion. And so we take this moment to say thank you.

To our backers: thank you. You are making a difference in DC and in the lives of the students who will take this project on. I hope you stay with us and watch in the next year as the project grows.

I especially want to note that so many of you stepped up in ways public and private, financial and otherwise, to insure the continued success of Homicide Watch DC. Some of you wrote guest columns, or shared with us in comments, what Homicide Watch meant to you. Others wrote about this project on your own sites. Still others took to Twitter, Facebook, and even the phonelines to encourage others to back Homicide Watch DC.

Chris and I are working hard to get the student reporting lab up and running just as quickly as possible. We’ve reached out to some of the local journalism instructors we know already and have asked for recommendations. We’ll be doing a larger push to the schools this week. We’ll be going directly to students, too; later today we hope to post information for students seeking positions with Homicide Watch DC.

Homicide Watch has been on hiatus for three weeks. And that’s three weeks too long. As soon as we find the right first person we’ll start training them and get the site up and running right away.

Links Roundup: What Homicide Watch DC Means to Us

A curated roundup of the week’s media coverage of the Homicide Watch DC kickstarter campaign.

Says Lillian Cohen-Moore:

Since Homicide Watch had to close its doors a few weeks ago, Antoinette Mitchell, Bidley Warren and Stephan Manuel Pool have been murdered in DC. Their stories will go untold. Those who come after them will be forgotten. I’m asking you as a backer, a journalist, as a survivor. To help close the gap.

For the victims. For the students who will tell their stories and be supported financially to do so. For the friends I’ve lost, whose murders have been forgotten.

Clay Shirky writes:

Homicide Watch matters because they are more than just thorough, they’re innovative. They’ve designed the site like a set of feeds and a wiki rather than like the crime section of a newspaper. The home page shows the most recent updates on all pending cases. Each victim gets their own page, where those updates are aggregated. Every murder is mapped. Every page has the tip line for the detective assigned to the case. Every page hosts a place for remembrance of the victim.

This way of working isn’t just technologically innovative, it’s socially innovative, in a way journalism desperately needs. The home page of Homicide Watch shows photos of the most recent seven victims; as I write this, all seven, are, as usual, African-American. Like a lot of white people, I knew, vaguely, that crime was worse in black neighborhoods than in white ones, but actually seeing the faces, too often of kids not much older than my own, makes it clear how disproportionately this crime is visited on African-Americans.

This is one of their most remarkable innovations: murder coverage has always been racially biased in this country. The old saying for New York papers was not to bother covering murders north of 96th street, where the victims were almost certainly black. The casual exclusion of most citizens from most DC crime coverage is a continuation of that legacy; news organizations aren’t generally in the business of introducing their readers to the realities of life elsewhere in their town. Simon Anderson, father of 5, was gunned down in northwest DC. Terrance Robinson was killed in southeast DC the day before. Antwan Boseman was shot to death two miles south and three hours earlier. And so on, and on, and on.

Mahoganie writes in her DC blog Mahoganie: Musings East of the Anacostia River:

It was hard to escape DC’s nickname(s), Murder Capital or Dodge City, as I grew up here in the 80s. It’s no secret that our murder rate was ridiculously high and believe it or not, we had a reputation outside of the four quadrants and surrounding suburbs. I still find it both comical and disturbing that a stranger I met in New Orleans (pre-Katrina) winced when he learned that I am from southeast DC. He literally told me;

“I know I’m from the ninth ward, but I’ve been to DC. I know what yall cats in SE are all about. I can’t hang with yall. Yall cats are rough.”

Yeah, I know…another stereotype, but that goes to show that the nation…even the world is watching us. This encounter took place long after the 80s; in 2003 to be exact. By then our homicide rate was on the decline. During its height in the 80s and early 90s, homicides were covered in the news, either as a blip or (depending on the intensity, circumstances and who was involved) it garnered detailed coverage; such as the case of Catherine Fuller, a 1984 murder case that gained national attention, and was somewhat unresolved as those convicted sought a new trial (in 2011) until a judge upheld the convictions earlier this month. From my standpoint, the coverage of homicides in the District is about the same from the time I was a kid to now as an adult in my 30s; treated as a blip or depending on the who, what, when, where and why, it gets major coverage.

The Amicos will only choose five students to participate and they will compensate them. With only a little over 20 days left in the kickstarter fundraiser, Homicide Watch DC is seeking to raise $40,000. Already, they have raised over $14,000.

This seems like a fantastic idea that even I, as that financial struggle is oh so real for me, is considering contributing. However, my only hope (or concern) is that the Amicos select a diverse group of reporters. Without sounding too preachy or political, the reality in this industry is that diverse newsrooms are little to none. Things are in such dire straits, the National Association of Black Journalists (NABJ) are recommitting themselves to the mission of diversity.

Steve Buttry

If you need more of a nudge, check out Homicide Watch. It’s one of the best examples I’ve seen of a local journalism startup. I want it to survive and I hope you’ll contribute to its Kickstarter campaign (I have) to keep it going while founder Laura Norton Amico is at Harvard on a Nieman Fellowship.

I want to see quality journalism thrive. I want to see Laura’s vision, enterprise and innovation rewarded. I want to see crowdfunding grow as a revenue source for quality journalism. Let’s make this work.

Patrick Cooper writes:

Through a mix of database and shoe-leather reporting, the site has covered every homicide in the city in recent years, under the banner “Mark every death. Remember every victim. Follow every case.” The site has become, in equal measure, a place for citizens to learn about violent crime in their neighborhoods and for victims’ loved ones to grieve and share memories.

For those of us who grew up in Washington in the 1980s and early ‘90s, too easily remembering the body counts and police scandals from the crack wars, it’s amazing this site even has a place to begin. But the city has come a long way, and one wonders how information, transparency and the crowd can assist on the rest of the journey forward. Even with multiple council members out and our mayor in trouble now, an aware population keeps pushing the city ahead. Progress is arriving apart from leadership.

Says Upworthy:

Let’s be real. The media only reports on homicides when they’re sensational and/or feature pretty white girls. Homicide Watch D.C.(one of the most innovative experiments in Internet journalism) is trying to change that by elevating the conversation and the D.C. community’s understanding of violent crimes by reporting on every single homicide in the D.C. area over the course of one year. Homicide Watch D.C. has done some groundbreaking (and award-winning) work in its first two years, but it needs our help to stay alive for what promises to be an amazing third year.

The Sidney Hillman Foundation covered Homicide Watch on their blog, saying:

Homicide Watch is a young journalism startup that reports on every single murder in Washington, DC. No other media outlet comes close. Murder victims in DC are disproportionately black and poor, and their stories are underrepresented in mainstream media coverage. Homicide Watch provides an invaluable service to members of beleaguered communities.

Writes Kim Bui:

I told someone yesterday about backing them on Kickstarter and they mentioned how impossible it seems that this crew gets so much information about each and every murder. But they do. Because they are not only amazing human beings, but they have a simple, fresh and unique way of reporting. Something I wish all reporters did.

For background on Homicide Watch, see Content’s Q&A with Laura and Chris about Homicide Watch and building reporting frameworks here and the Washingtonian’s profile of the site here.

Have we missed a link? Leave it in the comments or send it to us on Twitter: @HomicideWatch.

And if you’ve been waiting to make a donation and become a backer of Homicide Watch DC, now is the moment we need your help. We need 225 $25 pledges in 5 days to make our goal. Stand with us in saying: Mark every death. Remember every victim. Follow every case.

One Week Left to Save Homicide Watch DC

Three weeks ago we came to you with a plea: help us keep Homicide Watch alive by donating to our kickstarter campaign.

Your response has been overwhelming. More than 600 people have donated. Some as little as one dollar, others as much as 500 dollars.

Here’s why it matters: In the three weeks since we had to shutter HomicideWatch.org, Antoinette Mitchell, Bidley Warren and Stephan Manuel Pool have been killed. In DC.

At Homicide Watch we believe that Mitchell’s, Warren’s, and Pool’s lives matter. That all our lives matter. And that how people live and die in DC matters to every one of us.

There are five other names you won’t find on Homicide Watch DC either: the names of suspects arrested in murder cases since we shuttered. And their stories matter, too. Because how we dispense of justice, finding defendants guilty or innocent, matters to every one of us, too. Unless we bring back Homicide Watch DC, the stories of these five suspects will not be told. We will not know how, or whether, justice is served in DC.

If we are to do this, to tell these stories, we have to raise $15,000 in one week. We’ve already raised $25,000, but here’s the tricky thing about Kickstarter: if we don’t raise all the funds, your donation is returned to you and Homicide Watch gets nothing.

So while it’s incredible that together we’ve raised $25,000, we need to make a final push to make sure we cross that $40,000 line. Otherwise the site stays closed.

If I haven’t convinced you that Homicide Watch is worth funding, consider this appeal from Clay Shirky, who writes:

Homicide Watch matters because they are more than just thorough, they’re innovative. They’ve designed the site like a set of feeds and a wiki rather than like the crime section of a newspaper. The home page shows the most recent updates on all pending cases. Each victim gets their own page, where those updates are aggregated. Every murder is mapped. Every page has the tip line for the detective assigned to the case. Every page hosts a place for remembrance of the victim.

This way of working isn’t just technologically innovative, it’s socially innovative, in a way journalism desperately needs. The home page of Homicide Watch shows photos of the most recent seven victims; as I write this, all seven, are, as usual, African-American. Like a lot of white people, I knew, vaguely, that crime was worse in black neighborhoods than in white ones, but actually seeing the faces, too often of kids not much older than my own, makes it clear how disproportionately this crime is visited on African-Americans.

This is one of their most remarkable innovations: murder coverage has always been racially biased in this country. The old saying for New York papers was not to bother covering murders north of 96th street, where the victims were almost certainly black. The casual exclusion of most citizens from most DC crime coverage is a continuation of that legacy; news organizations aren’t generally in the business of introducing their readers to the realities of life elsewhere in their town. Simon Anderson, father of 5, was gunned down in northwest DC. Terrance Robinson was killed in southeast DC the day before. Antwan Boseman was shot to death two miles south and three hours earlier. And so on, and on, and on.

And if you’re still reading, and you’re still not convinced, consider Antoinette Mitchell. Consider Bidley Warren. Consider Stephan Manuel Pool.

Seven days. $15,000. Stand with us in saying: Mark every death. Remember every victim. Follow every case.