In the last conversation Brady Dale Flowers II had with his mother, she told him to be careful about the friends he kept. A few weeks earlier, he’d thrown a rooftop cookout without permission, some 30 kids showed up at their apartment building in southwest Washington DC, and she’d received
His mother warned him to be careful. By evening, the US student was dying.
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Brady Dale Flowers II was shot and died on May 8. Photo / Shantae Flowers
But the incident in the Tenleytown neighbourhood, and additional gunfire involving young people the day after Flowers was shot, have left families on edge in an area that thousands of students stream through each weekday from several nearby schools. They include Flowers’ sister, a cheerleader in 11th grade at Jackson-Reed.
Joshua Daniel, a priest at St Columba’s Episcopal Church not far away from the high school, has three children in the neighbourhood’s schools. He talked with other kids about the pair of shootings a few days after Flowers died.
“When we talk to many of the students who knew the child who was shot and died, many of them were, I think the only word to describe it was numb to the violence,” he told other residents at an Advisory Neighbourhood Commission meeting held recently.
“These children have all grown up hearing about shootings, and seeing them, and being affected by them,” Daniel said. “I just want to say how sad that is.”
Flowers’ football teammates described him as a charismatic jokester who frequently wore a big smile. He worked as a cook at Gordon Ramsay Fish & Chips at the Wharf, his mother said, and he was about to start a second job as a locker room attendant at the Waldorf Astoria on Pennsylvania Ave.
“He was really looking forward to it,” said his aunt, Alisha Cole. “He liked fancy things, and so I think when he came in there he was just a bit in awe of the glory that the property is.”
“Like most teenage boys,” Cole said, “he liked music, he liked girls, he liked fashion, cars, sports. He liked hanging out with his friends.”
The area around CVS and Whole Foods along Wisconsin Avenue is a regular meetup spot for Jackson-Reed students after school. The commercial strip gets congested as school lets out, creating a bustling scene of kids rushing in and out of fast food restaurants or milling around in front of them. Some residents complain of the occasional smell of marijuana or kids being less than respectful to passersby.
Flowers had brought about US$600 ($1025) in cash to school the day he was shot, his mother said. Police told her they found it afterward on the street in his bookbag. He liked having the stack of cash, she said, though normally he would leave it at home. She speculated that maybe he intended to buy an outfit or something for prom.
Shantae Flowers said the story she’s heard, passed to her from a teen who was there, is that her son was with friends when the shooting happened. One or several turned on him for whatever reason – “possibly to rob him”.
“They said one of the guys held him, one of them had a gun and gave it to the shooter,” she said. “They said the shooter, while the other guy held him, was hitting him in his face with the gun.”
One group of teens tried to help Brady, and he managed to get free as the story went, his mother said. “They said as he was running, he tripped,” she said. “He didn’t fall, but because he tripped, it slowed him up, and then that is when he got shot.”
The bullet hit Flowers in the hip. When his mother arrived at George Washington University Hospital, a doctor said her son was stable, she said.
Within hours, she was told his condition was critical. When she saw him, he was hooked to a ventilator.
The next morning, she said, hospital staffers told her the blood wouldn’t stay in her son’s body. She asked where the bullet was, and they said they didn’t know. They did scans, performed surgery.
“They kept giving him blood,” she said. “... Then they said they don’t have no more blood to give him.”
“They ran out of blood,” Shantae Flowers said. “He used all the blood up in their blood bank.”
He died that afternoon.
Flowers said the same name keeps coming up as the shooter’s, a student at Jackson-Reed. Flowers said she hasn’t convicted the child in her mind.
“I’m telling a story, but I’m hoping that the police do their job,” she said. “My heart tells me that name has come up, but I wasn’t there.”
Flowers said she feels sadness, not anger. “And the reason is because they’re still kids.”
She added about whoever is responsible for her son’s death: “Even if he doesn’t go to jail or whatever, God will, you know, have to deal with that. Or he will have to deal with God.”
No arrests had been made, but homicide detectives were talking to witnesses, looking at video surveillance, processing forensic evidence and “making good progress,” Christopher Dorsey, commander of DC police’s second district, told people at the ANC meeting.
“I am confident in the detectives, they are phenomenal,” Dorsey said, “and they are working the case really hard.”
Police are offering a US$25,000 reward for information leading to an arrest.
Next month, on graduation day, Shantae Flowers said, she plans to put on her son’s black Louis Vuitton shoes and walk the stage for him.
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