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Richard Hooper
Jefferson Jackson Steele
Richard “Ricky” Hooper, 52
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Posted 3/30/2005

[I was shot] in the spring of 1995. It was about 1 in the morning, and I was leaving from a friend’s house going to get the bus. The bus stop was right there at Baltimore and Martin Luther King. I was about a quarter of the distance from getting to the bus stop when I was approached by three guys. They asked me for change, but I didn’t have no change. All I had was bus fare. Then we started tussling, fighting, whatever . . . and then a gunshot.

From it being so close it went straight through my neck. I didn’t feel any pain. What really made me realize that I had been shot through the neck was that I was choking [on my own blood].

There was a low wall and I sat down. I was fading out . . . y’know, blacking out. Later I found out that when the ambulance got there [the paramedics] had to revive me. My heart had stopped. They revived me then, and [again] when I first got to the emergency room, and [again] on the operating table.

There was a certain point where I didn’t care [if I died]. Maybe because I wasn’t living my life like I should back then, as far as drinking and doing this and that. Seems like the only time I really wanted to live [was] after my surgery when I was in the hospital and my family would come to visit me. Then I would see the concern on their faces. But, y’know, I felt like a couple of times that [my life] didn’t matter.

It was years that I was going back and forth to different hospitals. When I was first getting over it I couldn’t talk at all. I couldn’t talk at all for about a year, but I guess it was a sort of a blessing because my mind was so full of anger. All I could think about was revenge. If I could’ve talked, it would have just been anger. I guess God held my tongue for a reason.

They were probably some kind of drug addicts. It would have been easy to pick out the area where they probably came from. I was just thinking about getting some of my boys together and go find ’em. But since I had grown out [of] that stage, I look at the good [the shooting] done, because I might have went and got the wrong guy. I might’ve gotten the wrong guy . . . been in prison for life only to find out that the guys I shot and killed was the wrong guys. Even if I got the right ones and ended up in prison, my life would’ve been wasted. I’m glad that things turned out the way they did. I’m glad I now have a different way of dealing with a situation.

One thing about people that came up in the lifestyle here . . . if you walk away from [confrontations], you’re a punk, a chump, weak. I found out that I’m more of a man to walk away from it than to be a fool to stay there and get myself in trouble again. If I’d have gotten my little revenge or whatever, that would’ve been the fool’s way of going about it. I didn’t die, so I still got a chance to go on, and I’m glad about it.

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