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In Philly, who cleans up the road after gun violence? : Photographs

May 29, 2024
Legislation enforcement collect on the scene of a deadly capturing in Philadelphia on April 28, 2023. Matt Rourke/AP disguise caption toggle caption   Matt Rourke/AP   Legislation enforcement collect on the scene of a deadly capturing in Philadelphia on April 28, 2023.   Matt Rourke/AP   Subsequent month marks two years since Addie Dempsey's grandson, Raheem Hargust, was killed throughout a shoot-out on her South Philadelphia block. He was 36, and a frequent customer to his grandma's home. The night time of Hargust's loss of life, police got here to gather proof, take away the physique and converse with neighbors, Dempsey stated. However when she walked out of her home the next morning, there was nonetheless blood on the sidewalk the place Hargust's physique had been. "I seen it and I needed to get it up," stated Dempsey, 76. As gun violence escalates in sure U.S. cities, the loss of life toll has overshadowed a problem that's not often mentioned or acknowledged: many shootings go away behind violent and grisly messes, in public locations, and metropolis businesses do not at all times deal with clean-up rapidly or sensitively. Typically a sufferer's kin or neighbors do it themselves, which might add to their grief, shock and emotions of abandonment. Bucknell Road, the place Dempsey has lived for 3 many years, is a block the place folks know one another – kids experience bikes within the afternoons whereas adults chat on folding chairs or stoops. Dempsey wished to scrub the blood up earlier than the neighborhood kids noticed it. "The children, it would mess with their minds," she stated. A neighbor throughout the road helped Dempsey clear – they used bleach, water and brooms. The recollections of that morning are nonetheless vivid for her. "A complete lot of stuff be in your thoughts, particularly whenever you're taking a look at blood. You get nervous," she stated. "I...

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