

2016 Hot Sale Cigarettes Release And Sales ,provide high quality Cheap Newport & Marlboro Cigarettes, Up TO 63% Of
A Bowie neighborhood party ends in deadly shooting Two house parties Saturday night brought dozens of cars and even more people to a wealthy Bowie street that is usually pin drop quiet. So the shooting that killed one man and injured two others left residents shocked and many grieving. Prince George's County police were searching for a suspect and motive Sunday in the shooting that left Aaron Leach, 21, of Upper Marlboro dead after being shot outside a large colonial home in the Woodmore area late Saturday. Another 21 year old man and a 23 year old man were also shot in the incident, which occurred in the 11500 block of Lottsford Terrace, said Cpl. Clinton Copeland, a police spokesman. The two, who were not identified, were treated at a hospital and released. Neighbors said one had been shot in the hand; the other, in the leg. Leach's family members were grieving the death of a promising man in an area where even thefts are rare. "My son was murdered. He was shot down like a dog," Millicent Edgar, Leach's mother, said in the living room of her Upper Marlboro home. Family photographs, many including Leach, smiling with shoulder length dreadlocks, lined a shelf stretching the length of the room. Edgar said she had been told that her son had tried to quash a fight between two others at the party. One man left but returned with a gun, she said. Neighbors said people in their late teens and early 20s were spilling out of the basement and into the back and front yards of the house. Neighbors said they heard about a half dozen shots in all. Leach worked the night shift at a Target, was a Washington Redskins fan and was passionate about rap music, his mother said. He attended Eleanor Roosevelt High School in Greenbelt before leaving and getting a GED, she said. He split his time between his mother's and his father's homes, she said. Edgar, a nurse at Washington Hospital Center, said she has treated many young men with gunshot wounds. She never imagined one of those could be her own son. "I've taken care of these boys" at the hospital, she said. "Fed them, wiped their behind, and I'd tell them, 'Man, I hope you know you're the same age as my son.' " Residents of Lottsford Terrace said the party was for the 20th birthday of the son of a neighbor, who had recently returned from college. There was another party around the corner, which attracted mostly high school age people, and there was traffic between the two. Neighbors said they didn't worry, because the owners of both houses had put fliers in their mailboxes promising to end the parties early. Violence "would have been the last thing we thought of," said Rick Williams, who lives next to the house where the shooting took place.