On Thursday
afternoon, March 19th, I left my home in Newport News, VA and headed to Williamsburg for my Professional Development class at William and Mary. The routine was
simple. I was home that afternoon and left my neighborhood, took the right turn on to Shields Road, which I followed to Jefferson Ave., one of the two anchor roads
which travels from the south to north end of town. To make the right on to
Jefferson from Shields, one must drive around the perimeter of Deer Run Apartments,
whose entrance you cross just after making the turn. Since class was at 4:30,
and Williamsburg is 10 miles away, I estimate that I drove past the Deer Run
entrance on Jefferson and Chester Road at about 3:55.
Why bring this up? About
45 minutes later, Adrian Holiday and Jeremy Taylor were shot to death in the Deer
Run parking lot, not more than 100 yards from the spot I had just crossed.
Adrian, 26, was found
slumped in the driver's seat of the white Mercury SUV he was driving. Jeremy, 23,
who was catching a ride, tried to make a run for it, and was gunned down in the
middle of the parking lot, in broad daylight. It appeared that a couple of
stray pedestrians, perhaps known to Taylor, had inquired about a ride in the SUV. But once they entered, things went from bad, to worse, to deadly.
Unfortunately, events
such as this are becoming too common in Newport News and neighboring Hampton. Usually there are teenagers, drugs and gang wars involved. But Adrian was a working grown man. He was a veteran who served in Afghanistan. He was engaged to be married. He was not involved in illegal activity.
But this incident
touched me for a couple of other reasons. I didn’t know Jeremy, but Adrian was a
shot-put and discus thrower for our Denbigh High track teams from 2005-2007. I
knew him and brother Jazz well. He was also a lineman on the football team, and
at 6’3” and about 300 pounds, stood out in any crowd, not just because of his
size, but also his monster personality. They called him “A-Boogie” and it was a
name that Adrian made up. As his Dad Jeremy said at the funeral – “Isn’t it
something? You just wake up one day, and decide that everyone is going to call
you A-Boogie from now on. And everybody did.” It’s probably needless to note
that Adrian’s funeral was one of the saddest events I have ever encountered.
However, it was very well attended – a testament to the legacy of friends and
memories that Adrian left behind.
But it’s the second
reason why this event has touched me that will continue to touch our friends
and neighbors. Jeremy Holiday, with his wife Aundrea, a police officer in
Williamsburg, are using their tragedy as a teaching moment, and one that a lot
of folks should pay attention to. Newport News, like many communities across
America, is stifled with the “no snitch” policy of the streets. Witnesses may
see, but many will never tell, either out of fear, or on a much sadder note,
because it is considered to be the honorable way to behave on the street.
“Snitches get stitches” is a way too familiar mantra, but many times, the witnesses
are more concerned about losing their street “cred,” as opposed to a couple of
teeth.
In spite of this, two
persons of interest have been identified by the Newport News police. In this
forum, I’m not ready to drop their names, simply because they haven’t been
charged, and certainly not convicted yet. Go figure, it might be slanderous. I
will be happy to do so in due time. But the Holiday’s are taking the offensive.
Two weeks ago, on May 4th, they gathered 25 or so family members and
friends, made signs, invited local newspapers and TV camera crews and marched
through the middle of Warwick Lawns, the same neighborhood where one or both of
the alleged perpetrators live. At the very least, the Holidays believe that
someone in the neighborhood knows something, and they want the person or
persons to start talking.
“We’re not going to
stay locked up in our house,” said Jeremy Holiday. “We’ve been victims once –
we’re not going to be victims twice.”
Link to the story can
be found here:
Other neighborhood
marches of this type are planned within the Denbigh community. The point is
simple. You can run, but if people stand up and tell the police what they know,
you will no longer be able to hide.