Squeegee boys in Baltimore lay down violent cac

Son Goku

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Mayor has to get this under control before some deranged vigilantes take matters into their own hands.


These fat cacs get no sympathy from me (:pacspit: ) but if a squeegee kid [read: grown-ass man or teen who needs to get a real job] ends up catching a hot one offa some bullshyt like this, I'm not shedding a single tear. :unimpressed:
 

3rdWorld

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Baltimore teen facing life in prison after first-degree murder charge in traffic shooting​


Anders Hagstrom
Tue, August 2, 2022 at 1:33 PM·2 min read


A 15-year-old Baltimore boy has been charged with first-degree murder and faces potential life in prison for the alleged shooting of Timothy Reynolds during a traffic incident last month.
Baltimore State's Attorney Marilyn Mosby announced the first-degree murder charge in late July, and a Grand Jury indicted the boy on Tuesday.
Maryland law requires that anyone over the age of 14 be tried as an adult if charged with first-degree murder.
The boy, who remains unnamed, was among a group of squeegee workers when the early July confrontation with Reynolds began. Squeegee workers are the common but controversial sight in Baltimore in which youths stand on street corners with water and soap, cleaning the windshields of cars stopped at red lights — often without asking permission.
Reynolds, 48, was driving through the intersection where the boy was standing, and an argument ensued between him and the group of squeegee workers. Reynolds then pulled forward and parked his car, exiting it with a baseball bat in his hand, according to police.
BALTIMORE 17-YEAR-OLD JASMINE BRUNSON, FATALLY SHOT AT AFTER-PROM PARTY, WAS A ‘BREATH OF FRESH AIR’: FAMILY
BALTIMORE, MD - AUGUST 24: State's Attorney for Baltimore, Maryland, Marilyn J. Mosby is interviewed by Shoshana Guy, Senior Producer NBC News (not pictured) on August 24, 2016 in Baltimore, Maryland. (Photo by Larry French/Getty Images for BET Networks) <span class=copyright>Getty</span>

BALTIMORE, MD - AUGUST 24: State's Attorney for Baltimore, Maryland, Marilyn J. Mosby is interviewed by Shoshana Guy, Senior Producer NBC News (not pictured) on August 24, 2016 in Baltimore, Maryland. (Photo by Larry French/Getty Images for BET Networks) Getty
BALTIMORE POLICE COMMISSIONER BLAMES ‘TOTAL DISREGARD FOR HUMAN LIFE’ FOR RAMPANT VIOLENCE
A 45-second surveillance video part way into the incident reportedly shows Reynolds backing away from the group of squeegee workers but pointing his bat at them, police say. He then walks behind a car and is cut off from view, at which point the squeegee workers "seemingly surround him," according to the Baltimore Banner.
When the group returns to view, Reynolds is seen swinging the bat toward the workers. One of the workers is seen hitting Reynolds in the head with a rock as he is swinging the bat toward the boy.
The boy, who was 14 at the time, then draws a firearm and shoots five times while running away, hitting and killing Reynolds.
Reynolds was a husband and father of three children.
 

AlbertPullhoez

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Baltimore man charged with shooting squeegee workers who allegedly stole $2,200 from his mother​



ALTIMORE -- A Baltimore man was recently arrested for allegedly coaxing squeegee workers into his truck and taking them to a home in West Baltimore and shooting them, according to charging documents obtained by WJZ.

Zhamiel Dixon, 26, was taken into custody on Sept. 21 after he allegedly shot two people in an alley on May 19. He has been charged with first-degree assault and two counts each of attempted first- and second-degree murder, along with several handgun violations.

Documents revealed two men and a teenager were squeegeeing at the intersection of Moravia Road and Sinclair Lane in May when Dixon pulled up in his black Dodge pickup truck. Dixon offered them a couple of hundred dollars to help him move stuff from one place to another.

So, the three accepted the offer and were taken to the home in the 2400 block of Edmondson Avenue.

When they got out and walked to the back porch, Dixon reportedly asked, "Who did this to my mom? Who took the money the other day?"

Dixon then allegedly pulled out a gun and started shooting. A 17-year-old boy and a 23-year-old man were shot in the head and neck. The third person escaped.

Officers found a black pickup truck, and DNA swaps identified Dixon as the person of interest. Witnesses also picked out Dixon as the possible shooting suspect.

A day before the shooting, Dixon's mother was stopped at a red light on Hillen Road when three males approached her car and asked for money. She said she didn't have any money and that they asked for a Cash App payment, according to court documents.

The woman handed over her phone and the squeegee workers took $2,200 out of her account, according to charging documents.

Documents said Dixon and his brother, who is in jail, were upset about an incident with their mother and discussed it over a jail call. They believed that squeegee workers stole money from her.

On one hand i'm like :manny: but then on the other hand he kidnapped them nikkas before he did it
 

OfTheCross

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Baltimore Sun - We are currently unavailable in your region

In short, some cac attacked some squeegee boys at an intersection with a baseball bat.
They were ready for him and put him to sleep.
They'll try to say that cac was shot before he did anything, but according to this article they have video that proves otherwise.
We should protect that young brother that laid that cac down at all costs.

Police identify person of interest in Inner Harbor squeegee shooting; video shows Timothy Reynolds’ final moments​

By Lee O. Sanderlin and Jessica Anderson
Baltimore Sun

Jul 11, 2022 at 7:59 pm
Baltimore Police have identified a 15-year-old boy as a person of interest in Thursday’s fatal encounter between squeegee workers and a man wielding a baseball bat, according to three people with knowledge of the investigation into the Inner Harbor shooting.

A dashboard camera video of Thursday’s shooting shows what appears to be the teen shoot at 48-year-old Timothy Reynolds five times.

Baltimore Police spokesperson Lindsey Eldridge would not confirm details of the investigation, instead saying detectives are “still following active leads and the investigation is ongoing.” Eldridge also would not discuss the search for the person of interest.

The brief dashcam video reviewed by The Baltimore Sun picks up after Reynolds had driven through the intersection at Light and Conway streets at around 4:30 p.m.


When the video starts, Reynolds had already exited his car with a metal baseball bat, walked across Light Street and confronted the workers.

He can be seen walking away from the intersection, presumably back toward his car, as three squeegee workers follow him. They get near him but another car obstructs the view. Less than a second later, they turn to run as Reynolds starts chasing with the bat raised. At roughly the same time as he swings his bat toward one of the workers, another throws what appears to be a rock at his head from behind. The video shows the rock hitting Reynolds’ head and bouncing off.

Reynolds, still holding his bat, turns around when a third squeegee worker pulls a handgun and starts firing. The first shot appears to hit him somewhere in the side of his body and he starts falling. As the shooter is beginning to walk away, he shoots at Reynolds four more times.

Reynolds was lying on the ground until first responders rendered aid. He died shortly thereafter.

It is still not clear what originally happened to cause Reynolds to get out of his car. The contents of the video were first reported by The Baltimore Banner.

“He should have just kept driving,” Carroll Reynolds, Timothy Reynolds’ father, told The Baltimore Sun last week about the incident.

One squeegee worker at a different intersection, 17-year-old Michael Augins, told The Sun he thought both Reynolds and the shooter were in the wrong.

“I feel as though he shouldn’t have had the gun ... but the man shouldn’t have hopped out the car,” he said.

Authorities are offering a $16,000 reward for more information about the shooting.

The shooting sparked social and political outrage on all sides, with the description of a middle-aged white man wielding a baseball bat toward a group of Black youths showcasing the racial undertones of the city’s squeegee debate.

Accusations of violence, property destruction and harassment, sometimes substantiated, are regularly used as evidence the city must do something about the squeegee workers. There have been 59 calls for “squeegee disturbances” at East Conway and Light over the past 18 months, according to Open Baltimore data. Calls about the window washers at that intersection spiked in June, when there were 13 — more than double as many as the month with the next-most calls since Jan. 1, 2021.

So-called “squeegee disturbance” calls were the most common types of 911 calls from that intersection other than auto accidents.

On the other side of the squeegee debate is a diverse coalition, led by Black Baltimoreans, who point out that most people working intersections as squeegee workers are teens and children trying to survive and are not a threat. Many of the workers need the money to provide for younger siblings or their own children.

Baltimore City Councilman Kristerfer Burnett said Monday if the squeegee workers were white, the narrative around their plight would be different.

“The response would be different,” Burnett said.

The discourse around squeegee workers has gone on for decades, and Mayor Brandon Scott has tried to deter people from squeegeeing with a jobs program.

Deputy Mayor Faith Leach, who oversees the Mayor’s Office of African American Male Engagement, said last week that staff seek out squeegee workers daily and offer individualized plans, connecting them with mentors and jobs. But many workers opt to continue to squeegee as the work provides an instant influx of cash for people living under precarious circumstances.

Burnett said at a city council meeting his office helped a family living in a hotel where one of the sons was squeegeeing in order to afford the room.

“A lot of families in Baltimore are not able to get the help they need,” he said.

Baltimore Sun reporter Emily Opilo contributed to this article.
This is some 3rd world country shyt.
 
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