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Friday, September 6, 2013

46-Year-Old White Man Shoots 8-Year-Old Black Boy In The Face In Front Of Neighbors -”His Jaw Was Just Hanging”


Dallas police, family members and the local community are still trying find answers as to why a 46-year-old man opened fire on an 8-year-old child on Tuesday, shooting him in the face while he was playing outside.




Dallas Police have arrested a 46-year-old Dallas man in the shooting of an 8-year-old boy Tuesday night at an apartment complex.

Donald “D.J” Maiden, Jr. is in critical but stable condition at Children’s Medical Center in Dallas.



According to reports, D.J. was outside playing in the parking lot at the La Bella Palms Apartments just before dark. He took a gunshot full in the face; but managed to run for help.

Neighbor John Fuller was astounded at that. “He was holding, all his jaw was just hanging, like, and all his little friends was over there crying and stuff.”

Fuller and his friends were dumbstruck when the third-grader ran past them, rushing home to his mother.
“I heard a loud bang. And then five seconds later a little kid, little DJ, he ran around the corner holding his jaw with a mouthful of blood,” said Justin Yancey, who dialed 911.

Although the gunman has been identified and reportedly even admitted to shooting the child when asked by police, young Donald’s family is still baffled as to why something like this happened.

Police identify the gunman as 46-year-old Brian Cloninger of Dallas.

He apparently doesn’t live at the apartment complex but Fuller saw his truck parked there early in the afternoon.

Cloninger was arrested for injury to a child and is being held on a $2.2-million bond.

None of this answers the family’s question of “why?” said Sharon Locklin is D.J.’s grandmother. “I just don’t know why this would happen. I’ve never experienced anything like this. And I don’t understand why someone would target an innocent child like this,” she said.

She went on to describe her grandson’s injuries. “He lost from here to here on his face; and they’ve got his mouth wired shut, and he has metal plates and he has lots of reconstructive surgery. But by the grace of God he’s going to be okay.”

CBS 11 News spoke to a woman who identified herself as Brian Cloninger’s wife. She says she has no idea what happened as has no details. But she says the real tragedy is that a little boy was hurt.

According to the family, 8-year-old Donald is said to still be in critical but stable condition with his jaw wired shut after previously being placed in a medically-induced coma.

Dekalb Police Officer Shoots Teen Skipping School


The person shot by a DeKalb County police officer Tuesday morning was a 16-year-old Southwest DeKalb High School student skipping school, not a would-be burglar as initially believed, police said.

DeKalb County Police Chief Cedric Alexander said Wednesday the shooting was an “unintentional misfire.”

“It has been revealed to us that the subject shot by one our DeKalb police officers was not associated with the burglary on Streamside Court,” Alexander said. “He was truant from school and began running when he saw police officers in the area.”

The teen was shot in the right arm and was in stable condition at a local hospital, police said.

Police were called to a home in the 2600 block of Streamside Court. A woman who had barricaded herself inside said invaders had broken into her home.

Two alleged burglars were found in the attic, police said. The officers believed as many as two more possible suspects got away, police said.

Alexander said officers saw one of those suspects running from the Streamside Court home. At the same time, the chief said, the teen saw police canvassing the area and fled, fearing he was in trouble.

The officers assumed the teen “was part of those (suspects) that were running away from the crime scene,” the chief said. “But actually, he’s running because he’s truant.”

Alexander said one of the K-9 officers who saw the teen gave chase. When the officer’s dog tracked the teen to a shed the teen startled the officer and the dog, Alexander said.

“That’s when we had an unintentional misfire,” Alexander said.

Police did not make clear whether the officer’s weapon malfunctioned or whether the officer inadvertently pulled the trigger.

The officer has been placed on administrative leave pending the outcome of an internal investigation.

Alexander said that, had the youth stopped running, the incident probably wouldn’t have happened.

“Absolutely it would’ve been different,” he said. “Had he stopped right there … That would have been it.”

The chief acknowledged that the teen could have been killed.

“He was lucky,” Alexander said.