John McDonogh High School

John McDonogh Senior High School
Location
2426 Esplanade AvenueNew Orleans, Louisiana
United States
Information
Type Public
Established 1902
School district Recovery School District
Faculty 53
Grades 9 to 12
Enrollment 513  (2011–07)
Sports Football, Basketball, Baseball, and Volleyball.
Mascot Trojans

John McDonogh Senior High School was the 3rd high school for African-American pupils in the city of New Orleans, Louisiana. John McDonogh has a vast sport history, winning district in football, baseball, and basketball a combined 83 times in its 109 year history. Prior to Hurricane Katrina it had an average enrollment of 1,200 making it one of the largest high school per enrollment in Orleans Parish School Board It has a current enrollment of 513 post Katrina. .

John McDonogh became the center of National news when on April 14th 2003 when 10th grade student Johnathan "Caveman" Williams was brutally shot and killed in the school crowded gymnasium during P.E John McDonogh High School shooting

Contents

Notable alumni

Johnathan Williams Killing

The John McDonogh High School shooting was a school shooting that occurred on April 14, 2003 at John McDonogh High School[1] in the Mid-City neighborhood of New Orleans, Louisiana, United States.[2] The two men killed 15-year-old student Jonathan "Caveman" Williams.[3]

Details

At 10:30 a.m. on April 14, 2003, two men entered the school property via gaps in the fence armed with an AK-47 and a semi-automatic pistol.[4] Immediately after students and faculty entered the school gymnasium, the two men shot at 15-year-old Caveman Williams[5] at least 18 times. Three female students were wounded, and a pregnant senior was trampled by a stampede of students.[6][7] Jonathan Williams died at the scene and the two perpetrators immediately fled the school campus.[4] The injured recovered.[5]

Aftermath

After the event, officers commanded by Jimmy Keen, a lieutenant with the New Orleans Police Department, attempted to interview witnesses at school and their houses. The TIME article described the event as having 150 witnesses. Keen said that the students responded to questions from the officers with "shrugs and stares." Keen said that his sergeant said that he feels "like the Marine Expeditionary Force in Iraq. The people in the neighborhoods don't want us here. They don't speak our language. They won't talk to us.'"[4]

Later murders

On October 27, 2003 two people related to Jonathan Williams's killers received fatal injuries after an ambush. 76-year old Myrtis Bickham, a retired automobile mechanic and Smith's grandfather, and 31-year old Roosevelt Brown Jr., one of Smith's cousins, received assault rifle gunfire shortly after 9:00 PM outside 2324 Ursuline Street.[8] Brown had a handgun with him at the time of his death; a The Times-Picayune article said that he may have worried about his own safety.[1] Bickham received gunshot wounds to the head and torso and was declared dead at the scene. Roosevelt Brown also sustained head and torso wounds; he died hours after the shooting at the Medical Center of Louisiana. On October 30, a close friend of the Brown family died. 24-year old Kenya Ambrose, a welder at an Avondale, Jefferson Parish shipyard, died at the 2300 block of St. Bernard Avenue three days after the killings of Bickham and Roosevelt Brown occurred; the location of Ambrose's death is within walking distance of Bickham's house. Police believe that Ambrose died because of his relationship with the Brown family.[1]

Investigators believed that the Williams family was not directly responsible for the killings; investigators said that friends and associates of Jonathan Williams tried to avenge the high school student's death by killing everyone that they believed had responsibility for the death, even though the suspects were already in prison.[1]

Involved parties

The courts found that Steven R. Williams[9] (no relation to Jonathan Williams) and James Tate committed the shootings, while Raymond Brown, Tyrone Crump, Herbert Everett, and Michelle Fulton (a student of John McDonogh) conspired in the killing. The two killers were told that Williams conspired in the murder of Hillard "Head" Smith IV, a boy who was Fulton's boyfriend,[1] Brown's cousin, and a student at Joseph S. Clark High School.[4] Hillard Smith was found dead from gunshot wounds in front of an abandoned house on April 7, one week before Jonathan Williams died.[5] Articles of The Times-Picayune stated that police believed that Smith's friends and family believed that Jonathan Williams killed Hillard Smith.[1][10]

Jacquielynn Floyd of The Dallas Morning News said that the story would not have made national headlines if the killers had not killed Jonathan Williams in a school gymnasium and injured three bystanders and instead killed him off campus.[3]

The court system convicted Steven Williams of second degree murder and received a life sentence. Tate pleaded guilty to manslaughter and conspiracy to commit second degree murder and received a 15-year sentence. On September 20, 2006 four people with less direct involvement pled guilty and received their sentences. Raymond Brown pled guilty to criminal conspiracy to commit second degree murder and received nine years. Crump pled guilty to accessory after the fact and received five years. Everett pled guilty to criminal conspiracy to commit second degree murder and received five years. Fulton pled guilty to the same charge as Everett and Raymond Brown and received five years. Everett and Fulton, in prison since 2003, received credit for time served after sentencing in 2006. Crump and Raymond Brown made bail months prior to the sentencing and faced re-arrest due to a weapons charge.[5]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f Young, Tara. "Student's death sparks crescendo of revenge." The Times-Picayune. Wednesday February 11, 2004. Retrieved on January 7, 2009.
  2. ^ Young, Tara. "HOT ZONE." The Times-Picayune. Monday February 9, 2004. Retrieved on January 7, 2009
  3. ^ a b Floyd, Jacquielynn. "Pointless tragedy's postmortem." The Dallas Morning News. April 22, 2003. Retrieved on January 7, 2009.
  4. ^ a b c d Hylton, Hillary. "The Gangs of New Orleans." TIME. Sunday May 24, 2006. Retrieved on January 7, 2009. 1.
  5. ^ a b c d Nolan, Bruce. "4 plead guilty in killing at school." The Times-Picayune. Thursday September 21, 2006. Retrieved on January 7, 2009.
  6. ^ Young, Tara. "Special Report - Murder." The Times-Picayune. Wednesday February 11, 2004. Retrieved on January 7, 2009.
  7. ^ Lewis, Edmund W. "Madness and mayhem." The Louisiana Weekly. April 28, 2003. Retrieved on July 7, 2009.
  8. ^ Double Murder Investigation. New Orleans Police Department. October 27, 2003. Retrieved on January 19, 2010.
  9. ^ "Teen murder suspect saw himself as marked man." The Advocate. April 18, 2003. Retrieved on January 7, 2009.
  10. ^ Ritea, Steve and Tara Young. "Violence Thrives on Lack of Jobs, Wealth of Drugs." The Times-Picayune. Sunday February 08, 2004. Retrieved on January 7, 2009.