Mayoral Hopefuls Debate Communities of color hear from candidates QR code for Portland Observer Online See Local News, page 3 ‘City of Roses’ Volume XLV Number 15 www.portlandobserver.com Wednesday • April 13, 2016 Young, Gifted and Black Honoring 28 students from the community See Metro, page 9 Established in 1970 Committed to Cultural Diversity photo by M ark W ashington /t he p ortland o bserver Mayor Charlie Hales and others gather at Peninsula Park in north Portland to address a spate of gunfire in local communities. The news conference featured Mr. and Mrs. Bradford, an elderly couple who live in fear after their home of 40 years was shot up earlier this month in suspected gang-related violence. Also pictured is Antoinette Edwards, director of the Mayor’s Office of Youth Violence Prevention. After caught in crossfire, elderly couple pleads for peace C ervante p ope t he p ortland o bserver A string of shootings has pushed an elderly black couple to plead for an end to gun violence while local law enforcement has pledged to step up efforts to com- bat local gangs. Over four dozen rounds of bul- lets blasted through three homes just off North Albina Avenue and by ‘We Live in Fear’ Ainsworth Street across from Pen- insula Park during the early hours of Sunday, April 3. Luckily no one was injured, but the many nearby residents were left shaken, includ- ing Mr. and Mrs. Bradford, a cou- ple in their 80s. The Bradford’s home was among those caught in the cross- hairs of the suspected gang activ- ity. In efforts to publically address and openly discuss the gunfire and a spate of shootings across the city, Mayor Charlie Hales stood in Peninsula Park last Thursday with the Bradfords, police, the U.S. At- torney for Oregon, the Multnomah County District Attorney and oth- er community leaders. Charlie Mae Bradford sat sweetly next to her husband as she described some of the dam- age done to her home of 40 years, before leading into her heartfelt request: “We live in fear now. We want to feel safe in our home again. We want everyone to feel safe again. Please stop the shooting, we need to get to caring for each other. Please put down the guns,” Brad- ford pleaded. A few members of Enough is Enough, an organization of wom- en who have lost loved ones to gang violence, shared the personal accounts of lives lost to gunfire. Of those present, Perlia Bell, Shannon Taloff and Kiar Chaney chose to speak. Bell’s daughter, Asia, was killed in a shooting back in 2002, while Taloff’s son Anthony Jackson was killed last summer, and Chaney’s brother Marquis being gunned down in March of last year. Assistant Police Chief Kevin Modica, State Rep. Lew Frederick and U.S. Attorney Billy Williams spoke on the collaborative efforts of law enforcement agencies to abate gang violence. Adult parole and probation gang unit super- visor Bryan Smith talked about working with other agencies and rehabilitation programs targeted to former perpetrators. “We all live here,” said Pas- C ontinued on p age 4