Four children between the ages of 11 and 14 were shot in a stolen car at 1 a.m. on Sunday in Minneapolis.
Minneapolis police were notified of gunshots from ShotSpotter activations in West Broadway and Girard Avenue, along with a 911 call on Plymouth Avenue North reporting shots being fired at a vehicle with five people inside.
Officers arrived at the scene and issued first aid to two boys and two girls with gunshot wounds who were sent to Hennepin County Medical Center.
Around 30 bullet casings were found at the scene but O’Hara says it’s possible more bullets were fired, with some of the casings dropping into the suspects’ vehicle.
The initial investigation determined five minors were inside a stolen Kia with one of them driving, when a dark-colored sedan began following, and someone inside fired an automatic weapon.
“What happened here—one car chasing another car with fully automatic gunfire—it just shows really brazen and callous behavior. They don’t care about their own lives, let alone the lives of other people,” O’Hara said.
“While there are fewer cars being stolen, again, the cars that are being stolen here, particularly among juveniles, are connected to more and more serious crimes, and that’s across the board. Robberies, assaults, you name it.”
O’Hara stated that two minors involved in the incident were arrested two weeks ago for stealing a car.
“We are failing to deter this behavior and with that being said we are failing these kids as well. Four kids shot between 11 and 14 is outrageous and everyone should be up in arms over it.”
“Juvenile investigators referred two cases to the county attorney’s office involving to the individuals for felony charges on Aug. 9,“ O’Hara said during the Aug. 20 press conference. ”The kids weren’t charged, they weren’t diverted, and despite pleas from their parents begging for help, begging for them to be detained, they were let back out into the street into the same environment to commit more crimes which they did over the weekend.”
“I’ll tell you, here it feels like we have to take the fun out of it. When you get caught joyriding a stolen car, especially if it’s multiple times, there needs to be a consequence, and I feel like that’s where we have failed here.”