New Orleans police were last night investigating the city's
sixth murder in 24 hours.
Responding to a call on Saturday night, police found a
31-year-old man lying in the middle of a street with multiple
gunshot wounds, officer Garry Flot said. He was pronounced dead at
the scene.
The murder followed that of three brothers and a friend killed
in a neighborhood not far from the French Quarter, and a fifth
person was gunned down in a separate incident hours later.
The shootings are the latest round of killings as the city
struggles to rein in the drug and gang-related violence that has
shadowed the recovery from Hurricane Katrina.
In mid-June, Governor Kathleen Blanco sent the Louisiana
National Guard and state police to New Orleans to help fight crime
there after five teenagers were shot to death in a single
attack.
Such sensational murders have a crippling effect on the city's
struggle to rebuild its tourism industry and persuade evacuees to
return, said New Orleans city councilman James Carter, who heads
the council's committee on crime.
"Unfortunately, it's not a new reputation," he said. "People go
back to those old days when we had so many murders. We're nowhere
near that, but we have to make sure we don't get back there."
That will take more than strong law enforcement, Carter
said.
"The spotlight Katrina put on the city showed the real reason
for these murders abject poverty and a poor education system," he
said. "We have to go from looking at this as a strict law
enforcement situation and take a more holistic approach."
The latest shooting happened in Central City, where most of the
killings have occurred. The others, however, did not happen in the
high-crime areas police have been targeting in their drive to stamp
out the violence, police Superintendent Warren Riley said on
Saturday.
Detectives were uncertain about the motive and were still
looking for the assailants on Saturday.
The three brothers 16-year-old twins and a 21-year-old were
killed late on Friday in the Treme neighborhood, as was their
39-year-old friend, Riley said. All four lived nearby.
They were sitting on the porch of an abandoned house when two
men walked by, then turned around and started blasting, Riley
said.
The fifth shooting happened early on Saturday in the Gentilly
neighborhood, an area that was severely flooded and has been slowly
rebuilding. Police said they found a man dead in a street after
they received reports that shots had been fired.
(China Daily July 31, 2006)