Pubdate: Thu, 02 Mar 2000 Source: New York Times (NY) Copyright: 2000 The New York Times Company Contact: 229 West 43rd Street, New York, NY 10036 Fax: (212) 556-3622 Website: http://www.nytimes.com/ Forum: http://www10.nytimes.com/comment/ Author: David Barboza A LIFE OF GUNS, DRUGS AND NOW, KILLING, ALL AT 6 MOUNT MORRIS TOWNSHIP, Mich., March 1 - His father was in and out of prison. His mother, evicted from her own home, sent him and his brother to live with an uncle in a dilapidated house here, just north of Flint. There, he did not even have his own bed and fell asleep in a place that neighbors say was filled with noise, drugs and guns. And on Tuesday, the police say, the 6-year-old got his hands on one of those guns, stuffed it in his pants pocket and went off to first grade, where he killed a classmate. Today, cars paused outside the white clapboard residence, as passers-by tried to get a look at the home of a troubled child, a boy who the police say did not fully comprehend what he did when he used a .32-caliber handgun on the 6-year-old girl, Kayla Renee Rolland. She was shot once in the chest just before 10 a.m. Tuesday in front of a group of about 22 first graders as they made their way into the hall of the Theo J. Buell Elementary School. The boy put the gun in a desk after the shooting and simply walked away. Kayla was rushed to the Hurley Medical Center. She was pronounced dead at 10:29 a.m., less than an hour after the shooting. Questioned by detectives, the boy did not cry, the police said, and afterward sat and drew pictures. "This young boy appears not to have many advantages in life," said Arthur A. Busch, the Genesee County prosecutor, who said the boy probably would not be charged and was released today to an aunt. Although the authorities appeared to take a sympathetic attitude toward a child who took another child's life, many residents said the real sympathy belonged with Kayla's family and questioned whether it was safe to send their children back to school. The authorities say the boy's own father, Dedric Owens, serving time in jail for a parole violation involving a burglary, said his son was living in a "crack house." The neighbors say they suspected it all along. In a raid Tuesday night, the authorities found a stolen handgun and narcotics in the home and jailed the boy's uncle, Sirmarcus Winfrey, on an outstanding warrant for theft. Another man, 19, who the authorities said lived in the home and brought the stolen gun used in the killing into the home, turned himself in to the police this afternoon. The authorities said they were considering charging Mr. Winfrey and the other man, whose identity was withheld by the authorities, with involuntary manslaughter. They are also considering pressing charges of child neglect against the family or guardians of the child, whose name was also withheld. "It's my position that we have, at this point, enough evidence to establish child neglect," the prosecutor said. "My attorneys will go to court even today to argue that the court should take jurisdiction of this little boy. I am very concerned about the placement of this little boy." This afternoon, the boy's parents appeared in probate court for a hearing on custody of the child, his 8-year-old brother and a 5-year-old sister who had been living with another relative. The state moved to gain custody of the three children, saying the mother, Tamarla Owens, was a drug addict who had admitted that she had exposed the children to marijuana on a daily basis. The judge said there were also reports that Ms. Owens had physically abused one of her children. Mr. Owens, who was brought from the local jail, spoke to the court, saying he was sorry for what had happened and acknowledging that he had not always been a good father. "I wish it had never happened," he said. "I just feel sorry for the other child." Ms. Owens sobbed nearby, wiping her eyes with tissue. Sheriff Robert Pickell said he went to the jail on Tuesday night to ask Mr. Owens if he knew anything about the gun. The sheriff said Mr. Owens said his son was frequently in trouble and had been in fights at school. The authorities said the Owens boy did not seem to comprehend what had happened and appeared nonchalant when interviewed by detectives on Tuesday. "It was their impression the boy didn't understand what he had done, did not appreciate the consequences of his actions and appeared to take this as some sort of, well, that this just kind of happens like on television," Mr. Busch, the county prosecutor, said at a crowded news conference this morning. "This is a young boy, 6 years old, who cannot obviously form criminal intent. He does not seem to understand the gravity of the event." A day after the shooting, the public schools in this working-class town remained closed. Flags flew at half staff. Residents left flowers and notes and toys at the doors of the school. The horror at Buell, the authorities say, was born of the anger of a little boy who found a weapon under a blanket on the bed at home and used it on a young girl he had quarreled with the day before. Chad Ballard, who lived next door to the boy's family for three years before the family was evicted, said the house had been raided by the police several times. Cars were always stopping at the home late into the night, Mr. Ballard said. He said he often quarreled with the family. The Owens boy and his brother often teased his dog, and when Mr. Ballard tried to stop it, the boys' parents often intervened. "She would say, 'Stop yelling at my kids,' and I would say, 'You need to take care of them.' " Mr. Ballard said that the mother worked during the day and into the evening and that the father was not around very often. Recently, however, Ms. Owens was evicted from the home. She moved elsewhere and often sent the two boys to stay with her brother and at least one family friend in a house on Juliah Street, about a half-mile from Buell. The two-bedroom home is a kind of makeshift auto shop. A Corvette sits on the front lawn, propped up by cement blocks. Another car, its hood ajar, sits to the back of the house next to a weathered John Deere snowmobile. There are auto parts and mangled hub caps scattered outside the house, candy wrappers, soda bottles and wires and equipment out front. The windows are shaded with old blankets and broken windows are patched with blue tarp. A dull light burns inside. A deep and muddy hole sits to the left of the house. "I didn't associate with them," said Will Oscar, 31, a neighbor who said he was planning to move soon. "There was always a lot of traffic there; I heard gunshots. I didn't feel safe. My car was stolen out of my driveway twice." He said he did not know the Owens boys were living next door. He said Ms. Owens often dropped them off there. They sometimes teased his dog, he said, but otherwise the boys were "just normal kids." In school, the Owens boy was often in trouble, the authorities said today. He had a social worker and had been in several fights. The authorities said they had heard that he had recently been in a quarrel or scuffle with Kayla. Three boys, walking by Buell today, said they witnessed the fight on Monday. "He was fighting with that little girl a few days ago," said John Owens, 13. "We walked by and said 'Chill out,' " said Julius Irving, 10. Wayne Morris, 14, said: "Then this guy tried to get him to stop it and he picks up this stick and starts hitting him. And the kid was a lot bigger." Wayne said there were lots of drugs in the area. "We walk down the street," he said, "and we hear guys say, 'Weed? Weed?' " Maranda Ide, 8, a third grader, said she had heard the gunshot. "I was in my class, writing from the dictionary," she said. "I heard something go 'bang,' and I immediately started crying, because I knew it was a gunshot, because we hear gunshots all the time around here." Maranda said that she did not sleep on Tuesday night but that she was not too afraid to go back to school. "I think tomorrow will probably be the same as it was before the gun was fired," she said. "But I think I'll probably cry for a while." No date has been set for reopening the schools. The front door of Buell is jammed with flowers, bunnies, teddy bears and candles. Cards read, "Kayla, we won't forget you." There are baskets of M & M's and sunglasses, drawings of broken hearts, splashed with crayon. A neighbor, Rasu King, 31, said she was dropping off a candle and a teddy bear. "I hope people realize how serious this is," she said. "If you can't go to elementary school, you can't go anywhere." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D