NJ triple murder victims’ kin gird for final trial
Topics: From the Wires, News
FILE - In this Tuesday Aug. 21, 2007 file photograph, from left, Dashon Harvey's grandmother Dorothy Harvey, his father, James Harvey, and Shalga Hightower, mother of Iofemi Hightower, listen to the court proceedings in Newark, N.J., of one of the men accused of the execution-style shootings that left Dashon Harvey, Iofemi Hightower and another college student dead and one wounded in a Newark schoolyard. The trial of Gerardo Gomez,the last of six defendants in the triple murder case, is scheduled to begin Thursday, Oct. 4, 2012. (AP Photo/Mel Evans, File)(Credit: AP)NEWARK, N.J. (AP) — In a Newark courtroom this week, 12 jurors and a packed gallery will hear how four college-bound friends gathered at a schoolyard one summer night to drink sodas and listen to music, their young lives full of promise and potential.
Then they’ll hear about the aftermath, the carnage that followed: Three of the four friends slumped against a wall where they’d been forced to kneel, pools of blood surrounding their bodies; deep slash marks from a machete crisscrossing one victim’s head and face.
Six suspects were arrested within two weeks of the murders. Three have been convicted at trial with the help of testimony from the survivor, who has earned a college degree since the attacks. Two other defendants have pleaded guilty.
Opening statements are expected Thursday morning in the trial of Gerardo Gomez, who turned 15 on the night of the slayings but is being tried as an adult, as were two other juveniles.
In the more than five years since Shalga Hightower lost her daughter, Iofemi, in the brutal slayings in this violence-scarred city, she and the other victims’ families have doggedly sat through three lengthy trials as well as hearings, guilty pleas and sentencings almost too numerous to count.
United by unspeakable tragedy, they vowed early on to see the process all the way through, no matter how painful.
“It’s without a doubt something we talked about from the beginning,” Hightower said Tuesday. “We stuck it out this long because we had to as parents; those were our children. And, because we needed to see for ourselves how the justice system works and that justice would be served.”
At the time of her death, 20-year-old Iofemi Hightower was working two jobs and considering attending at Delaware State University, where the other three were already enrolled. Dashon Harvey, also 20, was a social work major who fancied himself a fashion maven; 18-year-old Terrance “T.J.” Aeriel was already an ordained minister.
A fourth victim who survived being shot and stabbed is not being named by The Associated Press because of sexual assault charges against two of the defendants.
They were the type of kids any parent could be proud of, but particularly in a city where so many have been lost to the lure of the streets. That fact jolted the city, which had reached a 10-year high in murders the year before.




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