Reunion's tragic end
BY STEVE E. SWENSON, Californian staff writer sswenson@bakersfield.com
The family reunion -- nearly 100 strong, from small children to grandparents -- had been going on all day at the central Bakersfield home.
Around 12:30 a.m. Sunday, about 50 members of the Johnson family remained in the neat front yard on T Street, talking, reminiscing and joking when shots suddenly rang out from across the street.
"It's still a blur to me," said 38-year-old Willie S. Johnson, who was right next to his younger brother, Anthony Mack Johnson, as he was killed by the bullets.
Four others were wounded.
"I don't remember too much except being with my brother on the ground while he was bleeding. You can't understand the shock."
Police had no motive for the shooting. All the victims were "unintended targets," Bakersfield police spokeswoman Mary DeGeare said Monday. Four of the five were from out of town. Anthony Johnson, 37, was from Jacksonville, Texas.
"One minute we were all standing around talking, having a good time," recalled Willie Johnson. "The next minute everyone's lives changed for the worse."
He added, "The young kids who did this thing, their lives are gone too. This has to stop. You don't shoot up a family reunion."
It was family who was shot. Anthony's wife, Chrystin, 35, was shot in the leg. She was busy Monday making funeral arrangements.
Lavar Johnson, 32, of Madera, -- a cousin of the dead victim -- was shot in the abdomen. He was in good condition after two surgeries, his brother, Damon Johnson, said.
Lavar Johnson is a mixed martial arts and kickboxing fighter of some renown, having compiled a record of 12 wins, 3 losses in the last five years, according to fighting Web sites.
Others shot were Cynthia Mackey, 46, of Bakersfield, who sustained a minor wound to her hand; and Larry Dellouette, 62, of Los Angeles, who was hit in the foot.
Police are saying little about the suspects except they are two young, black males and a young black female, possibly in their late teens.
Police are not ruling out that the shooter or shooters were gang members. Anyone with information is asked to call police at 327-7111 or Detective Martin Heredia at 326-3873.
Anthony and Willie Johnson were raised by their father, Willie Lee Johnson, to be responsible men. In his world, he spends time with his children playing ball and going fishing, not leaving them to fend for themselves.
"I don't condone or associate myself with any type of violence," the 61-year-old father said.
Both his sons have jobs and families. Anthony, a truck driver, leaves behind his wife, twin 9-year-old daughters and a 17-year-old son.
The younger Willie Johnson said his brother was a philosopher. "He tried to make sense of things."
His brother would believe the suspects had a different kind of upbringing, he said, which made this violence possible.
Most CommentedMost Popular
Since Karen Goh returned to Kern County from a publishing career in New York in 2004, she has helped foster a strong network of Christian leaders in government, politics, media, business and nonprofits.
A settlement has been reached in radio talk show host Inga Barks' sexual harassment lawsuit against former co-host Scott Cox and American General Media.
Is Kern County, as has widely been reported, really the expulsion capital of California? That's the question posed Friday by state Sen. Michael Rubio, D-Shafter, to 50 or so Kern County educators, elementary and high school district administrators and community leaders.
Here's a bit of news that I didn't expect. The Kern County District Attorney's office has launched an investigation into whether the Board of Supervisors' practice of routinely placing the job performance of County Administrative Officer John Nilon on the "closed session" portion of its agenda is...
Since Karen Goh returned to Kern County from a publishing career in New York in 2004, she has helped foster a strong network of Christian leaders in government, politics, media, business and nonprofits.
Young's Marketplace, an independent grocery store that's a Bakersfield institution, will close at the end of the week.
Bakersfield’s Faast Pharmacy is going out of business and will be acquired by the big chain CVS, it was confirmed Monday.
Amtrak is suing a Kern County truck driver for more than half a million dollars in connection with a 2010 train crash in Shafter that injured about 20 people.