Crime & Safety
Charges Filed In Philadelphia Mass Shooting That Killed 5, Hurt 2
Authorities in Philadelphia have officially charged Kimbrady Carriker, 40, with murder and related crimes in connection with the incident.

PHILADELPHIA — Authorities in Philadelphia have formally charged the man accused of being the gunman in Monday's mass shooting.
Kimbrady Carriker, 40, has been charged with murder, attempted murder, reckless endangerment, aggravated assault, and firearm crimes.
Carriker is accused of shooting and killing Lashyd Merritt, 20; Dymir Stanton, 29; Ralph Moralis, 59; Daujan Brown, 15, and Joseph Wamah Jr., 31, all of Philadelphia, at about 8:30 p.m. at 56th and Chester streets.
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Two children, ages 2 and 15, were injured, one shot in the leg, and the other getting glass in his eyes from a window shattered by gunfire, police said. They were listed as stable, police said.
The shooting was reported at 8:28 p.m. in the area of the 1600 block of South 56th Street.
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Philadelphia Police Commissioner Danielle Outlaw and Philadelphia District Attorney Larry Krasner said while the officers tended to victims, they heard more gunfire near 56th Street and Kingsessing Avenue.
Some of the officers ran toward the gunfire, and as they chased the man, allegedly Carriker, he continued to fire.
Police finally arrested Carriker in an alley off South Frazier Street, police said.
Carriker was armed with an AR-15 rifle and a 9mm handgun and wearing a ballistic vest and carrying a police scanner, authorities said.
They believe he was acting alone, based on witness interviews and video captured of the shooting, said Staff Inspector Ernest Ransom, head of the city's homicide unit.
A second person who was initially detained after firing a weapon was released, Ransom and Krasner said, as it appears he was firing in self-defense.
The investigation into that continues, but Krasner said there was no legitimate reason to hold the second person.
Outlaw and Krasner praised the officers who responded for their bravery.
"I commend these officers for their unwavering bravery," Outlaw said. "Their swift actions undoubtedly save additional lives."
Krasner said authorities were working to provide support to the victims' families and everyone affected by the shooting, including the officers who responded.
"What the police officers went throughout there ... having to scoop injured or dying people into a vehicle at a time where there are shots going off everywhere and they have no way to protect their own backs, having to do that is rough," he said. "Having to do it all night is rough. Getting two hours of sleep and being back out there this morning is rough."
"There's a lot of people who had a very, very hard time last night," Krasner said, adding that the department's victim witness staff has been deployed to intensively assist the victims' families as well as the community, which he said has been "deeply, deeply affected."
"What I saw this morning on a beautiful July 4th when the temperature wasn't too hot, was completely empty streets," Krasner said. "I saw every porch empty. I saw every door closed. I saw every curtain where there was a curtain, pulled."
"I saw no kids playing," he said. "I saw a bicycle that had been left there from the time of the shooting, sitting on a corner untouched for 12 or more hours, nobody coming out to move it to take it or touch it. (It was) as if everybody understood what happened here was so horrible that for right now this is a desert."
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