INDIANAPOLIS — The death of 15-year-old Sadayreon Edwards on Indianapolis' northeast side Tuesday morning has many in the community searching for answers.
“Heart drop – sad – we are losing our young people,” Donita Royal with Mothers Against Violence Healing Ministry said.
Edwards was shot in the 6400 block of Meadowlark Drive and left lying in the middle of the street. That’s near North Arlington Avenue and 42nd Street in the Devington neighborhood.
“Life is just taken for granted in so many ways – a mother grieving over her child,” Mercedes Morris said.
Mercedes Morris has lived in the area where the Tuesday morning shooting took place.
“It makes it scary to even want to do things with our kids,” Morris said.
Morris has twins of her own and she wants to be able to enjoy the outdoors with her children without having to worry about gun violence.
“You don’t want to go to Chuck E. Cheese because there was a shooting – you don’t want to go to a park because there was a shooting there, it makes it hard especially us as single women," Morris said.
Donita Royal runs an organization called Mothers Against Violence Healing Ministry.
“Nowadays you better follow where they are going, that’s where we are at now – you must follow and see where your teenagers are at,” Royal said.
Royal echoes many of the community leaders’ recent messages.
“It’s time for the aunties and the uncles to come together – you got to find somebody to follow them and see what they are doing – you got to see what your kids are doing,” Royal said.
-
Fever stay alive in playoffs with 77-60 Game 2 rout over Dream
The Fever hosted their first playoff game since 2016 and fed off the energy of another sellout crowd to earn their first postseason win since Oct. 11, 2015, when they beat the Minnesota Lynx 75-69.Independent Indiana pushes to put more nonpartisan candidates on ballots
Independent Indiana is working to turn down the temperature on political disagreement by getting more independent candidates on the ballot, its leaders say.B&O Trail nears completion to connect west side to downtown Indianapolis
A 30-year vision to create a continuous path from Hendricks County into the heart of Indianapolis is almost complete as the B&O Trail Association prepares to open its newest expansion.Franklin Township Community School Corporation supports Google data center
The Franklin Township Community School Corporation has announced support for controversial plans for a Google data center.