Pubdate: Tue, 10 Feb 2004 Source: Times-Picayune, The (LA) http://www.nola.com/news/t-p/frontpage/index.ssf?/base/news-1/1076396141137220.xml Copyright: 2004 The Times-Picayune Contact: http://www.nola.com/t-p/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/848 Author: Gwen Filosa Series: Day Three - Article Four TURBULENT LIFE COMES TO A CLOSE ON TRIP TO CITY April Savoy Scheidel, a mother of three who grew up in Lacombe, next door to Mandeville, never made it home from the truck ride she took with two acquaintances into the city's Lower 9th Ward, just before Easter. Police said the trio was looking to buy drugs when something went wrong and a gunman opened fire on the pickup. Scheidel, who was shot in the back, died at Charity Hospital a short time later. She had cocaine in her system and had been drinking alcohol, the coroner's office said. After dropping out of high school, Scheidel became a certified nursing assistant. She worked in nursing homes, did some home health care work, and tried to make her marriage work. Recently, though, the 31-year-old's life had taken jarring turns. Her husband, Edmund, was sentenced to 30 years in prison after pleading guilty to sexually assaulting a boy several years earlier, a child who was not related to him. Scheidel was left with the mortgage payment on their trailer lot, a stack of bills and no car. When the lights were cut off, she and her children moved in with her mother in Lacombe. Three weeks before she was killed, Scheidel and her two youngest children, 3 and 4, had moved in with a friend in Slidell. "She was mad at me," her mother, Merle Savoy, said. "She wanted to go and do as she wanted. I said, I don't intend to be sitting up all night. I would ask her, if you're going to be out late, call me." Scheidel felt trapped, her mother said. Weight and back problems had made nursing work harder to come by. Cash was low, her prospects bleak. "I think she was more or less in a depressed state," Savoy said. "She couldn't get things together. It was killing her she couldn't give everything to her children." But Savoy said she had no clue her daughter was using street drugs or going to New Orleans regularly. Scheidel had stayed with her mother for a year before moving to the friend's place in Slidell, one of the friends who was with her when lethal gunfire rang out. At first, their mother's absence bred anger and confusion in her 3- and 4-year-olds. Things are calmer now that they're in school, but for Savoy, it's like starting all over at 60 to raise a family. "We talk about her, but they don't actually ask for her anymore," Savoy said. "They know she went to heaven." In June, police arrested Tremell Armstead, 25, in connection with Scheidel's murder. But at a magistrate court hearing, his attorney argued that Armstead, a man with convictions for drug possession and a weapons charge, was at the scene of his cousin's murder the same night Scheidel was killed. Several witnesses testified on Armstead's behalf. By August, prosecutors had decided not to seek formal charges, citing "evidence problems." No one else has been booked in the case.