Sunday, January 27, 2008

Murder in Walker's Point

From the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel:

A fatal shooting Saturday in Milwaukee's Walker's Point neighborhood has residents and business owners apprehensive about the safety of their burgeoning neighborhood.

A 42-year-old man who lives outside of the U.S. and has a residence in Milwaukee was shot to death early Saturday after being robbed near S. 2nd St. and W. Walker St., police said.

Police Capt. Michael Young said the man and two or three women were walking from a bar to the man's car about 1:10 a.m. As they reached the car, they were approached by two men, one of whom was carrying a handgun. The victim handed over his wallet and was shot. He was pronounced dead at the scene.

The gunman is still at large.

This is barbaric.

It's just horrible.

And the gunman has not been caught. This cold-blooded murderer is on the streets.

I wonder what he's doing now. I wonder what he's thinking. Does he feel guilty? Just a little bit?

Police would not reveal the victim's identity, where he was wounded or how many times he was shot. The Milwaukee County medical examiner's office performed an autopsy on the man Saturday, a spokeswoman said.

Young said nothing occurred inside the bar that led to the shooting. He called the homicide an "isolated event."

Oh, that's good. What a relief!

It was an "isolated event."

Walker's Pint owner Betsy Boenning was working at her tavern on S. 2nd St. a block away from the murder scene when she saw police flashers. She later walked outside to see officers roping off the scene with yellow police tape.

"I wanted to throw up," said Boenning, who has operated the bar for seven years. "We want Walker's Point to be the cool place where people come and have fun, not worry about their safety or their cars getting broken into."

Police said there is no pattern of robberies of this type in Walker's Point.

District 12 Ald. Jim Witkowiak said that the homicide is an anomaly in the neighborhood, but that the shooting follows a recent string of car break-ins. Police have stepped up patrols in the past six months in response to the increase in crime, he said.

"It's way out of character for us," Witkowiak said. "There are so many good things happening in that neighborhood. I really feel this could have happened in the parking lot of a hotel in Brookfield. I want the residents to know that we are in fact doing as much as we can do at this point."

These thugs are killing innocent people, and they're killing the city.

A horrible crime, like the murder of this man, can do enormous damage to an entire neighborhood.

...Walker's Point native Frank Gonzales, 75, said he worries how the perception of the neighborhood will affect business and residents.

"One shooting can drive people away," Gonzales said. "It took a hell of a long time to get businesses and people to come here. One incident can change that."

It could very well be that the murder was an isolated event, an anomaly.

But would you want to take the chance of becoming such an anomaly?

Hopefully, there will be an increased uniformed police presence so residents and patrons of businesses in the Walker's Point neighborhood are less afraid that they, too, will die in an isolated event.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

Please don't forget that the victim of this terrible crime is a real person -- a wonderful man who will be sorely missed by all who know him....

Mary said...

Absolutely.

I make that point here.

Mr. Milford's death isn't just a statistic.

It's important not to dehumanize the victim.

Discussing a crime in the abstract doesn't account for the enormity of the loss for family and friends of the victimized individual.

My heart goes out to them.

Anonymous said...

Thank you...

Anonymous said...

Please stop saying this is an isolated incident and that there is no pattern of that type of robbery in that neighborhood. People have been getting held up many times by the same people who fit the exact description!!! The only difference is this time they pulled the trigger! The neighborhood has a problem, the reality isn't being told! We all want that area to be nice -- we really do but we need to first admit it is unsafe and do something about it. But for god's sake do not continue to claim it is a rare type of event. It isn't!

Anonymous said...

Exactly.....

This was not an isolated incident, but an escalation of a long-term problem. I and many of my friends have had their vehicles broken into over the past weeks, months, etc. And I remember several muggings last year in which the muggers hid in exactly the spot they did Friday night.

If something isn't done to make this area (and many others in the city) I can only imagine it will get worse.

Mary said...

Milwaukee officials and their media mouthpieces are doing their best to spin this horrible crime as an unfortunate but rare occurrence.

They're acting blind and they want others to engage in the same game.