Jah'vae Minney | Homicide Watch Trentonhttp://trenton.homicidewatch.org/victims/jahvae-minney/Latest news about Jah'vae Minneyen-usSun, 05 Jul 2015 17:30:50 -0400The state of gangs in Trentonhttp://trenton.homicidewatch.org/2015/07/05/the-state-of-gangs-in-trenton/<a href="http://wordpress.homicidewatch.org/trenton/files/2015/06/10616506_1470443236582443_2225350411251779831_n.jpg"><img src="http://wordpress.homicidewatch.org/trenton/files/2015/06/10616506_1470443236582443_2225350411251779831_n-225x300.jpg" alt="This picture of a banner in memorial of Jah’vae Minney was shared on social media after his death." width="225" height="300" class="size-medium wp-image-3350" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">This picture of a banner in memorial of Jah’vae Minney was shared on social media after his death.</p> <p>After 16-year-old <a href="http://trenton.homicidewatch.org/victims/jahvae-minney/">Jah’vae Minney</a> was shot and killed, pictures of him fanning cash and flashing street signs were shared across several social media platforms.</p> <p>A picture of a memorial banner in honor of Minney’s death was displayed on the front page of The Trentonian, and the banner included the phrase “#116 Gang.” </p> <p>Minney was <a href="http://trenton.homicidewatch.org/2015/06/27/man-murdered-in-trenton-friday-night/">gunned down near the corner of Prospect Street and Bellevue Avenue</a> around 11 p.m. on June 26. When the story about his death was published with the aforementioned photographs, readers concluded that Minney was a gangbanger. In the July 2 edition of the newspaper, contributors to Back Talk assumed that Minney was killed because he was in a gang, and even accused him of flashing “gang signs” in a separate picture that was published alongside the story about his death. But police say those assumptions may be false. <span id="more-3412"></span></p> <p>“We’re getting calls from people saying that there’s an issue with Vae Gang or Twizzy Gang, but that’s not the case,” Detective Luis Baez of the Trenton Police Gang Unit said last week. “This is nothing more than his friends representing him and mourning his death. Everyone thinks this is a gang, but it’s not.”</p> <p>Police officials say young people will often use various hashtags across social media that include the word “gang” while mourning the death of a friend or family member. Police say their intelligence has so far found no existence of the terms Vae Gang, Twizzy Gang, or 116 Gang before Minney’s death, and that the group as a whole is not involved in criminal activity. Police also say they have so far found no information suggesting that Minney was involved in drug dealing or any other type of criminal activity normally associated with gang membership. </p> <p>“Every time there’s a passing of someone who was well liked, we see this trend,” Baez said. “Friends will use that person’s nickname as a ‘gang,’ or they’ll use a house number or the block where they hung out most as the name of a ‘gang.’ Friends will also represent whatever color the deceased wore most. But we don’t jump to conclusions and classify anyone as a gang member unless the identifiers are there. We would classify these people mourning his death as more of a street crew. But it’ll phase out after a couple of weeks and maybe show up again next year on the anniversary of his death.”</p> <a href="http://wordpress.homicidewatch.org/trenton/files/2015/06/11053572_1469940883299345_7582131842930848993_n.jpg"><img src="http://wordpress.homicidewatch.org/trenton/files/2015/06/11053572_1469940883299345_7582131842930848993_n-150x150.jpg" alt="Jah’vae Minney (contributed photo)" width="150" height="150" class="size-thumbnail wp-image-3349" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Jah’vae Minney (contributed photo)</p> <p>In regards to the picture of Minney flashing hand signs, police say it’s a typical pose that young people in urban cities use when taking pictures. In the picture, Minney is seen raising the pinky finger on his right hand, and his left hand forms the letter “L.” Police say the pinky pose means “I got money,” and the “L” means “I’ve got my gun nearby.” But Minney, police say, does not appear to have a reputation for carrying a gun or dealing drugs. Police believe that picture, and other pictures of Minney fanning cash, were merely the poses he used to fit in with peers. </p> <p>“That’s a normal pose that boys make nowadays, but at this time I wouldn’t classify him as a gang member,” Baez said. “Maybe he’s trying to fit in with friends. We hear that he was a likable kid.”</p> <p>Police acknowledged that some of the people rumored to associate with Minney may have questionable pasts. But Minney himself was trying to live a straight life, according to several people who spoke to The Trentonian. In fact, government officials say Minney applied for a summer job with the City of Trenton about 10 days before his death. His father Eric Parks said Minney also applied for another job, but was murdered before he had a chance to interview for the position. </p> <p>“They actually called me a couple of days ago because he hadn’t contacted them about the interview,” Parks said. “I had to tell them that he was deceased.”</p> <a href="http://wordpress.homicidewatch.org/trenton/files/2015/07/IMG_2193.jpg"><img src="http://wordpress.homicidewatch.org/trenton/files/2015/07/IMG_2193-220x300.jpg" alt="Jah&#039;vae Minney" width="220" height="300" class="size-medium wp-image-3420" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Jah'vae Minney</p> <p>Minney was also an active member of Shiloh Baptist Church, which he attended on a regular basis for at least a year and a half. </p> <p>“Jah’vae was active in our Thursday night high school fellowship, where we feed hundreds of young people weekly and provide recreational opportunities and engagement about spirituality,” the Rev. Darrell Armstrong said. “He was bright, motivated and spiritually inclined. I am extremely saddened, frustrated and angered by Jah’vae’s murder.”</p> <p><strong>The state of gangs in Trenton</strong></p> <p>Police say the current state of gangs in the capital city is not as it used to be from 2000 to 2005 when law enforcement faced a legitimate “gang war.” Gangs today are largely disorganized, police say, and street hustlers mostly look out for themselves, as opposed to adopting a gang ideology as they did 10 to 15 years ago. </p> <p>According to the bylaws of most gangs, if someone asks a member if he or she belongs to a gang, that person is required to admit it. But police say most of the suspects they arrest deny being in a gang, and are instead part of a disorganized street crew that may have members who are not at all involved in criminal activity. Police say they also encounter people who initially claim to be in a gang, but when asked to recite their gang oath or name the leader of the gang, they don’t know that information. </p> <p>“A lot of times we catch them in a bluff,” Baez said. “We don’t see a lot of commitment to gangs today, and there’s no leadership out there per se.”</p> <p>Officials admit that most of the well-known gangs such as the Bloods, Crips, Latin Kings, Netas and MS-13 have members based in Trenton. But police say the violence occurring on the city’s streets today are mostly related to personal arguments as opposed to gang-related disputes. </p> <p>“We don’t have gangs fighting other gangs just because they’re rival groups,” Baez said. “Instead, we’ll have a Blood from one street beefing with a Blood from another street for petty personal reasons. They usually beef over a girl, or over a drug sale that took place on someone else’s territory. The violence here today is more personal and not gang-related.”</p> <p>Police say it’s very common for street crews in Trenton to consist of several people who attended the same school and grew up protecting each other. Some members of a street crew may be involved in criminal activity, while others are not. Often times, police say, legitimate gang members will notice a street crew member making a name for himself in the drug game, and they’ll try and recruit that person into their organization.</p> <p>“It’s all about the power of selling drugs,” Baez said. “The person flexing the most muscle is usually the person who is selling the most heroin, which is cheap. Kids are selling heroin for $3 and up, but the average price is $5 to $7 for a single glassine packet.”</p> <p>Police say it’s difficult to know how many street crews are in Trenton because they often quickly fade away, and many of the members are not involved in criminal activity. But police estimate that gangs and street crews in Trenton each have about 15 to 25 members who range between the ages of 16 and 25. </p> <p>“Some of them walk away from the game in their late 20s, but a lot of them don’t make it to age 30,” Baez said. “It’s a shame.”</p> <p><strong>How to tell if a child is in a gang</strong></p> <p>Law enforcement officials don’t label individuals as gang members unless specific identifiers are present. For example, legitimate members will attend organizational meetings and admit to being in a gang when asked. They also draw gang symbols on notebooks or other property, and display gang tattoos on various parts of their body. Most gang members are also given a manifesto, police say, which outlines the bylaws of the organization and lists the names of other gang members and leaders. Police urge parents to look for those signs. Adults should also monitor whether kids are returning home with expensive clothing that wasn’t purchased by a parent or guardian. And to prevent young people from joining gangs, police advise parents and guardians to involve kids in other activities such as sports and after school programs. </p> <p>“A lot of parents don’t know who their kids are hanging out with,” Baez said. “Parents should check their son’s and daughter’s body. It’s amazing how many times we arrest someone and the parents have no clue the child has tattoos.”</p> <p>As of press time Sunday, police still had not developed any suspects for the murder of Jah’vae Minney. Anyone with information about the killing is asked to call the Mercer County Homicide Task Force at (609) 989-6406 or contact the Trenton Police confidential tip line at (609) 989-3663. Individuals may also call the Trenton Crime Stoppers tip line at (609) 278-8477. Those wishing to text a tip can send a message labeled TCSTIPS to Trenton Crime Stoppers at 274637.</p> Penny RaySun, 05 Jul 2015 17:30:50 -0400http://trenton.homicidewatch.org/2015/07/05/the-state-of-gangs-in-trenton/Jah'vae MinneyTeenager murdered in Trenton Friday nighthttp://trenton.homicidewatch.org/2015/06/27/man-murdered-in-trenton-friday-night/<p><em>By Trentonian reporters Sulaiman Abdur-Rahman and Penny Ray</em></p> <a href="http://wordpress.homicidewatch.org/trenton/files/2015/06/rsz_16210960.jpg"><img src="http://wordpress.homicidewatch.org/trenton/files/2015/06/rsz_16210960-225x300.jpg" alt="The Serenity Garden at the corner of Prospect Street and Bellevue Avenue in Trenton stands in full vitality June 27, 2015, hours after a 16-year-old boy was shot and killed at that intersection. (Sulaiman Abdur-Rahman - Trentonian)" width="225" height="300" class="size-medium wp-image-3344" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">The Serenity Garden at the corner of Prospect Street and Bellevue Avenue in Trenton stands in full vitality June 27, 2015, hours after a 16-year-old boy was shot and killed at that intersection. (Sulaiman Abdur-Rahman - Trentonian)</p> <p>Serenity Garden at the corner of Prospect Street and Bellevue Avenue was recently established to represent a place of beauty, peace and healing. </p> <p>But on Friday night, that blissful intersection became a crime scene as an armed perpetrator shot and killed a 16-year-old boy who was remembered on Saturday as “a good kid.”</p> <p><a href="http://trenton.homicidewatch.org/victims/jahvae-minney/">Jah’vae Minney</a> of South Logan Avenue, Trenton, was shot in the chest about 11 p.m. and taken to Capital Health Regional Medical Center by a citizen. The teenager was pronounced dead shortly thereafter, according to police, who have neither arrested a suspect nor announced a description of the shooter as of Saturday afternoon.</p> <p>“It is a shame that youth is getting caught up in the midst of the madness,” said Jason Rogers of Fathers and Men United for a Better Trenton as he stood Saturday morning on the landscape of Serenity Garden. </p> <p>For Jah’vae to be gunned down in that area just a few hours earlier, “It had to be mistaken identity,” Rogers sad. “He was just on the bus stop.”</p> <p>Jah’vae’s death marks the third homicide this week in Trenton. <span id="more-3330"></span></p> <p>Earlier this week, 22-year-old <a href="http://trenton.homicidewatch.org/victims/edwin-saddler/">Edwin Saddler</a> and 29-year-old <a href="http://trenton.homicidewatch.org/victims/harvey-sharp/">Harvey Sharp</a> were murdered during separate incidents that <a href="http://trenton.homicidewatch.org/2015/06/24/two-men-murdered-overnight-in-trenton/">occurred within minutes</a> of each other. So far this year, 12 people have been killed in this 7.5-square-mile capital city.</p> <a href="http://wordpress.homicidewatch.org/trenton/files/2015/06/11053572_1469940883299345_7582131842930848993_n.jpg"><img src="http://wordpress.homicidewatch.org/trenton/files/2015/06/11053572_1469940883299345_7582131842930848993_n-150x150.jpg" alt="Jah’Vae Miney (contributed photo)" width="150" height="150" class="size-thumbnail wp-image-3349" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Jah’Vae Miney (contributed photo)</p> <p>Jah’vae Minney was a member of a youth group at Shiloh Baptist Church and also liked to play basketball, according to people who knew him.</p> <p>One of the people who played basketball with him was Gary Tarver, 26, who lived in the same neighborhood as the teenager.</p> <p>Reacting to the news of the homicide, “It’s crazy,” Tarver said Saturday afternoon on South Logan Avenue. “He was a good kid. All he did was play ball. He was probably at the wrong place at the wrong time. … He was only 16.”</p> <p>Several dozen people embarked upon Serenity Garden on Saturday morning for a 10 a.m. ribbon-cutting ceremony that was already planned well before Jah’vae was gunned down in that area. The teenager’s death, however, nailed home the point for why Amini Sababu, 60, worked with Shiloh Community Development Corp. to establish that colorful, flower-filled garden in a city hard hit by violence.</p> <a href="http://wordpress.homicidewatch.org/trenton/files/2015/06/11653948_10153512431158189_322485678_o.jpg"><img src="http://wordpress.homicidewatch.org/trenton/files/2015/06/11653948_10153512431158189_322485678_o-169x300.jpg" alt="A mourner hangs a makeshift memorial for Jah’vae Minney who was shot and killed June 26, 2015. (Contributed photo - Rev. Lukata Mjumbe)" width="169" height="300" class="size-medium wp-image-3346" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">A mourner hangs a makeshift memorial for Jah’vae Minney who was shot and killed June 26, 2015. (Contributed photo - Rev. Lukata Mjumbe)</p> <p>“Serenity Garden is for people who lost loved ones to street violence,” Sababu said following the dedication ceremony that lasted about an hour. “We have people who come and sit at this garden and tell us they feel the peace; they feel the love.”</p> <p>Jah’vae Minney isn’t the first teenager to be slain in the streets of Trenton. For example, police still have not solved the May 2008 shooting death of 17-year-old city female Shanel Brady, who was gunned down on the 500 block of West State Street.</p> <p>“I’m paranoid to be in West Trenton, because they still haven’t found who killed my daughter,” said Angel Quattlebaum, 44, the mother of slain Shanel Brady.</p> <p>Quattlebaum was at Saturday’s ribbon-cutting event at Serenity Garden. Speaking about the annual gunplay here that has claimed the lives of men, women and children, “It’s senseless,” Quattlebaum said. “The generation doesn’t have respect for life. They don’t have respect for God, because if you respect God, you respect life,” she said. “If you feel someone disrespected you, you don’t lash out.”</p> <p>Rogers and Sababu expressed an optimism that Trenton could become a safer and more prosperous city.</p> <a href="http://wordpress.homicidewatch.org/trenton/files/2015/06/10616506_1470443236582443_2225350411251779831_n.jpg"><img src="http://wordpress.homicidewatch.org/trenton/files/2015/06/10616506_1470443236582443_2225350411251779831_n-225x300.jpg" alt="This picture of a banner in memorial of Jah’Vae Miney was shared on social media." width="225" height="300" class="size-medium wp-image-3350" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">This picture of a banner in memorial of Jah’Vae Miney was shared on social media.</p> <p>“We don’t get discouraged,” Rogers said. “We just continue to pray.”</p> <p>Sababu gave a remark that sounded much like President Barack Obama circa 2008: “We have to believe that change is possible,” she said.</p> <p>Anyone with information about the murders is asked to call the Mercer County Homicide Task Force at (609) 989-6406 or contact the Trenton Police confidential tip line at (609) 989-3663. Individuals may also call the Trenton Crime Stoppers tip line at (609) 278-8477. Those wishing to text a tip can send a message labeled TCSTIPS to Trenton Crime Stoppers at 274637.</p> <p><iframe src="http://trenton.homicidewatch.org/api/v1/homicides/131.html" width="100%" height="350" frameborder=0></iframe></p> Trentonian StaffSat, 27 Jun 2015 08:08:37 -0400http://trenton.homicidewatch.org/2015/06/27/man-murdered-in-trenton-friday-night/Jah'vae Minney