http://wjz.com/topstories/local_story_021115017.html
Amen God is good, it's just lets you know that while we are yet sleeping, He is not.
I know this is long but here is the news story....
WJZ) BALTIMORE, Md. WJZ.com has learned that the gunman who took his own life after he allegedly shot five people, killing one, in northeast Baltimore Saturday morning had a history of domestic violence. The murder was one of five over a span of 24 hours.
Baltimore City Police Detective Donny Moses confirmed to WJZ Eyewitness News that the suspect, 34-year-old James Lydell Ray, died after sustaining a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head.
Moses says that Ray had fled to Clarion, Pennsylvania after the shooting in Baltimore and barricaded himself an elderly couple's home. Police surrounded the house and a SWAT team eventually entered the residence before hearing a single gunshot and finding Ray with the gunshot wound to his head. Paramedics attempted to revive him, however he was pronounced dead shortly thereafter.
No one else inside the house was injured.
Ray was wanted in the quintuple shooting in northeast Baltimore early Saturday morning that left a 12-year-old girl dead. Police tell WJZ. Eyewitness News the shooting occurred after a domestic dispute inside the house of Ray's girlfriend.
According to Moses, police discovered the girl's body and four other victims after they responded to reports of a multiple shooting at 1335 Sherwood Avenue around 1 a.m.
Police say Ray shot his girlfriend, her two teenage sons, and a family friend before shooting and killing her 12-year-old daughter.
The woman, who was shot in the head, is listed in grave condition. The teens, 15 and 16, and the friend are expected to recover and listed in critical condition.
A search of court records reveals that Ray was charged with second-degree assault in 2001 and he was ordered to stay away from the 12-year-old girl killed in the shooting. But the case was later disposed.
Police also confirm there was a history of complaints between the couple.
The shooting is the second high-profile domestic violence case in the area this month. On January 12, police accuse Jason Woodward, who escaped from the detention center in Westminster, of stabbing his girlfriend multiple times at a gas station during a showdown with police.
"In domestic violence cases this is always our worst fear. There is always the potential in any domestic violence case that it will escalate to a situation like this," Maria Oesterreicher of the State's Attorney's Office tells WJZ Eyewitness News.
The State's Attorney's Office says in that case, just like the one in Baltimore, there were past complaints of domestic violence in the relationship.
The killing in Baltimore was one of five apparently unrelated murders in a 24-hour period from Friday to Saturday morning, The (Baltimore) Sun reported.
The five homicides bring Baltimore's 2006 total to 23 in 21 days.
Last January was just as violent, including one weekend when six people were murdered throughout Baltimore City over a span of 24 hours. The police commissioner blamed the drug trade.
Yet there have been signs of progress, as the number of homicides dropped from 276 in 2004 to 269 in 2005.
For more information on domestic violence as well what to do if you or someone you know is battling a domestic violence crisis, visit the Maryland Attorney General website for a list of hotlines.
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Family Fights For Their Lives After Shooting
http://wjz.com/topstories/local_story_021115017.html
(WJZ) BALTIMORE, Md. A woman critically wounded in a shooting that killed her 12-year-old daughter and wounded three others remained in a coma and in grave condition at Sinai Hospital Monday morning, Baltimore police said.
Antoinette Bennett, 35, was shot early Saturday morning during a domestic dispute with her boyfriend, James Lydell Ray, who later fled to the suburbs of Pittsburgh, where he fatally shot himself Saturday evening, authorities said.
Ray, 34, shot everyone inside Bennett's northeast Baltimore home. Her daughter, Kayla Baker, 12, was killed. Her two sons, Travon Baker, 16, and Devin Baker, 15, were wounded, as was a family friend, Michelle Hickson, 39.
Detective Donny Moses, a Baltimore police spokesman, said Monday morning that Travon and Devin had been upgraded to serious condition at Johns Hopkins Hospital, and that Hickson had also improved and was expected to be released from Hopkins soon.
Ray, who had a criminal history in Baltimore, shot himself as authorities closed in on him inside a home in Clarion, Pa., that he had broken into.
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Quintuple Shooting In Northeast Baltimore
(WJZ) Baltimore, Md. Baltimore Police tell WJZ.COM a 12-year-old girl is dead after a quintuple shooting early Saturday morning in Northeast Baltimore.
According to Detective Donny Moses, police discovered the girl's body and four other victims after they responded to reports of a multiple shooting at 1335 Sherwood Avenue around 1 a.m.
Police say 34-year-old James Lydell Ray shot his girlfriend and her 12-year-old daughter, two teenaged sons, and a family friend following an argument at the residence.
The woman is listed in grave condition. The teens, 15 and 16, and the friend are expected to recover.
Police have released an arrest warrant for the suspect and consider him armed and dangerous. They are looking for a 2005 Black Elantra with license plate #2BCP57. Anyone with information about the shooting should call 410-396-2100.
Stay logged on to WJZ.COM for the latest updates on this story.
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Quintuple Shooting Suspect Kills Himself
(WJZ/AP) BALTIMORE, Md. WJZ.com has learned that the man wanted in the quintuple shooting that took place early Saturday morning in Baltimore has killed himself after a standoff with Pennsylvania police.
Baltimore City Police Detective Donny Moses confirmed to WJZ Eyewitness News that the suspect, 34-year-old James Lydell Ray, is dead after sustaining a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head.
Moses says that Ray had fled to Clarion, Pennsylvania and barricaded himself an elderly couple's home. Police surrounded the house and a SWAT team eventually entered the residence before hearing a single gunshot and finding Ray with the gunshot wound to his head. Police initially said Ray was in "grave" condition.
No one else inside the house was injured.
Linda Ganoe, 62, said she and her husband saw the suspect emerge from behind a barn, run toward their house and enter their basement from outside at about 3:40 p.m. Saturday.
Her husband, Bernard, 63, went down to the basement, intending to confront the intruder, but after seeing the man quickly ran back up the steps and closed the door to their living area, she said.
"He gave us a real bad scare," she said.
Ganoe said the suspect then left their house and ran next-door to the home of her sister-in-law, who heard breaking glass and fled. The suspect stayed there until he shot himself to death sometime in the early evening, Ganoe said.
"Everybody's OK, thank God," she said.
D.J. Bevevino, 50, lives about 200 feet from the home where the suspect was found.
"The area was pretty well surrounded," he said. After the shooting, "they brought him up over the hill in an ambulance."
He said Clarion isn't used to police car chases and shootings.
"Clarion's pretty small and rural," Bevevino said.
Karl Becker, 49, said he was standing in his living room when he saw a black sedan traveling at high speed the wrong way down a one-way street.
"There were a lot of sirens and there was a helicopter flying around," Becker said.
Ray was wanted in the quintuple shooting in northeast Baltimore early Saturday morning that left a 12-year-old girl dead.
According to Moses, police discovered the girl's body and four other victims after they responded to reports of a multiple shooting at 1335 Sherwood Avenue around 1 a.m.
Police say Ray shot his girlfriend and her 12-year-old daughter, two teenage sons, and a family friend following an argument at the residence.
The woman is listed in grave condition. The teens, 15 and 16, and the friend are expected to recover.
The killing in Baltimore was one of five apparently unrelated murders in a 24-hour period from Friday to Saturday morning, The (Baltimore) Sun reported.
The five homicides bring Baltimore's 2006 total to 23 in 21 days.
Stay logged on to WJZ.COM for the latest updates on this story.
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Associated Press Writer Deborah Yao contributed to this report in Philadelphia.
BRIAN WITTE
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