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By Bill Forry
Managing Editor
Boston Police Commissioner Edward Davis told a
roomful of merchants and civic leaders last week
that he remains confident that the new year will
see a continued drop in violent crime in
Dorchester, despite a bloody January that has seen
five homicides in District C-11 alone, including
three last week. Davis huddled with about 40
community leaders and other law enforcement
officers in a unique mid-day meeting last Friday at
the C-11 police station on Gibson Street.
The meeting was organized by the two Main
Streets organizations along Dorchester Avenue -
Fields Corner and St. Mark's Area - which have
each seen a murder on their stretch of the avenue
this month. Davis blamed the recent surge in
shootings in Dorchester and other neighborhoods on
escalating gang "disputes" and outlined, in broad
strokes, the motives behind the killings.
"To have that stuff happening here is not a
pleasant feeling," Davis told the assembly. "It
doesn't make you feel any safer, but there is not a
burgeoning crime wave happening."
Davis explained that police had begun a sweep of
arrests that were targeting people "in
neighborhoods that are producing the violent
behavior." By Saturday, Boston Police announced
that the sweep had netted roughly 80 arrests, four
firearms and quantities of illicit drugs.
Davis said on Friday that the purpose of the
sweep was to send a message, but also to gather new
intelligence on recent violence.
"We're not simply arresting them, but we're
briefing them and developing new sources," Davis
said. "We've got substantial leads in the last 24
hours and I'm confident they will be cleared by
arrest."
Davis provided some new details on a pair of
shooting deaths that shook the Dorchester Avenue
corridor in the last two weeks. The first was the
Jan. 7 killing of 18 year-old Darrion Carrington
inside the lobby of the Canton House Chinese
restaurant at 1728 Dorchester Ave. Davis said that
Carrington was apparently stalked by a gunman who
followed him into the shop.
"[Carrington] was followed to that
location," said Davis. "He was at a function at a
different location and someone followed him
there."
Davis said police believe that Carrington saw he
was being followed and tried to evade his assailant
by ducking into the restaurant lobby.
Davis said that investigators now believe they
have "significant leads" in the murder, which has
apparent links to a subsequent killing in the
city's Roslindale section. A 23 year-old Dorchester
man, Darrius Jones, was one of three men shot in a
car after attending Carrington's Jan. 16 funeral.
The two other victims survived that attack.
Davis also addressed the Jan. 12 murder of
Tyrone Hicks, 20, who was gunned down on a Saturday
afternoon while walking near the corner of Adams
and Arcadia streets, just steps from Fields
Corner's busy crossroads and a Boston Police
officer on a walking patrol.
Captain John Greland said that Hicks was walking
with another person, who was not hurt in the
attack.
The Jan. 15 murder of 16-year-old Carlos Sierra
was also a targeted attack, Davis suggested. He
pointed out that Sierra was shot alongside a second
individual in the vestibule of a building at 16
Strathcona Road. The other person was not harmed,
although it has been reported that Sierra was shot
as many as 12 times.
Sierra, Davis said, had "just moved into that
neighborhood" and "the family, we believe, was
involved in drug activity at their last
address."
Another, non-fatal shooting incident last
Wednesday afternoon that left a man in his
late-twenties wounded on Topliff Street was also
discussed. Davis said that the incident has been
linked to an ongoing feud between residents at a
particular house on Topliff Street and another
group from nearby Ridgewood Street.
"There's clearly a back and forth between people
who live very close to one another, who are
literally jumping over the fence to shoot at each
other," Davis explained.
"This is a very small group of people who, if
you insult them, the way they respond is to use
violence, an eye for an eye," Davis said.
When pressed by Ashmont Hill activist and
meeting facilitator Roseanne Foley on whether or
not all of these incidents are actually
"gang-related," Davis suggested that they likely
were.
"We certainly have a real gang problem. This
significant violence that is occurring is occurring
because of gangs," Davis said.
Edward Crowley, a longtime Fields Corner
resident, said he does not feel that the area is
unsafe.
"If [the Hicks] shooting happened four
blocks away in either direction, this meeting
wouldn't be happening," said Crowley. "You weren't
going to stop it. It was an opportune moment for
someone to shoot someone they wanted.
"I'm not afraid to go to work. People cannot be
fearful to go to the avenue," said Crowley. "The
media is very unkind."
Davis concurred.
"If you were to read the columnists today, you'd
think there is no hope. I can't operate like that.
We know how to do it. There's more of us than there
are of them.
"The trends are going in the right direction, in
spite of this surge in violence," David added.
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