Professional Documents
Culture Documents
WWW CNN Com 2023 10 13 Us Shadrach Hall Turner Us Gun Deaths GDPR
WWW CNN Com 2023 10 13 Us Shadrach Hall Turner Us Gun Deaths GDPR
Editor’s Note: This story is part of a series profiling American youth killed this year by guns,
a leading cause of death of children in the US. Read more about the project here.
The adage comes up often when Shadrach Hall-Turner’s family discusses the 15-year-
old’s life. Shadrach was born in October 2007 in Washington state. When his parents
started struggling with addiction, a loving and close-knit network of extended family
members stepped in to help care for Shadrach.
Now, that village is devastated. Shadrach died in February, shot in the neck while playing
video games in a friend’s basement during a snow day in Reardan, Washington.
One of the teens there that day entered a plea deal on charges of first-degree
manslaughter and unlawful possession of a firearm as a minor and was sentenced to two
RELATED
and half years in juvenile detention, according to CNN a몭liate KXLY. Lincoln County
Prosecuting Attorney Adam Walser told CNN all evidence suggested the shooting was
“careless” and “reckless” but “unintentional.”
Shadrach “was the one who brought joy,” Tina Hall, Shadrach’s grandmother, said in an
interview with CNN.
He was “sarcastic – he’d do something funny to lighten the mood and make everybody
laugh,” said Mary Hoyt-Sims, Shadrach’s great-aunt, who took legal custody of him when
he was a toddler. “You take that light away from a family and it’s devastating.”
RELATED ARTICLE
Children and teens are more likely to die by guns than anything else
Shadrach is one of more than 1,300 children and teens killed by a gun so far in 2023,
according to the Gun Violence Archive. Firearms became the No. 1 killer of children and
teens in America in 2020, surpassing motor vehicle accidents, which had long been the
leading cause of death among America’s youth.
Gun violence is an epidemic in the US. Here are 4 things you can do today
“He was a brother. He was a cousin. He was a son. He was a grandson. He was a great
grandson. He was a friend. He had multiple roles that he played. He was a star football
player. He was all of those things,” his grandmother said. “He had an infectious, joyous
smile and laugh and was always doing just stupid little things to bring joy to people. That’s
who Shadrach is. And that’s the Shadrach that we miss.”
Shadrach was a talented multi-sport athlete and dreamed of playing for the NFL when he
grew up, his grandmother said. “That was his goal – to be in the NFL one day and to buy a
Bugatti and to buy his grandma a house,” she said.
Shadrach with his grandmother, Tina Hall
The 15-year-old had a limited relationship with his biological father and instead his
mother’s partner, Justin Ellery, filled that role – even teaching him how to play football.
Justin unexpectedly died in 2016, when Shadrach was just 8 years old.
“I, as a 62-year-old woman, have never even been through anything like that,” said his
grandmother. “I can’t imagine as an 8-year-old boy what that’s like.”
But just as his extended family o몭ered love and support to him, Shadrach turned that love
and support onto others in his life, like his younger brother, Laythan.
“Shadrach took his little brother by the hand and was the one that was there and told him,
I think more than anyone, that he is going to be OK,” recalled Jody Ober, Shadrach’s other
great aunt.
His relatives say he was often one of the only students of color at school, which was
sometimes challenging. But he used his vibrant sense of humor to “put people at ease”
and fit in, his great aunt Mary said.
Shadrach Hall Turner
“It’s hard to be that kid that’s di몭erent,” she said. “And he had a way of having a good
spirit about it and making people comfortable.”
At Shadrach’s funeral, they had to turn people away because the turnout was so big,
Shadrach’s grandmother said. They invited attendees to write goodbyes on his casket
with Sharpies and laid out a Lego Bugatti, a football and a carton of chocolate milk as
tributes to some of his favorite things.
“Shadrach was destined to make a di몭erence in this world,” she said. “And obviously by
the outpour and the number of people at the funeral – he had made a di몭erence in a lot of
people’s lives. And he was destined to continue to do that. I think he would have been an
incredible adult.”
For Shadrach’s family, the grief is ongoing. Family members told CNN they’ve watched
milestones pass for other children with an undercurrent of grief, the feeling that “Shadrach
should’ve been here.”
“French toast was his very favorite,” said his grandmother. “We’re six months into this –
we still haven’t had French toast.”
“It’s a never-ending thing, that hole that’s there, that part of your heart that goes with
them,” said his great aunt Jody. “It never comes back.”
them,” said his great aunt Jody. “It never comes back.”
Search CNN...
Live TV
Audio
Electronics
Fashion
Beauty
Home
Reviews
Deals
Money
Gifts
Travel
Outdoors
Pets
World
Politics
Business
Markets
Opinion
Health
Entertainment
Tech
Style
Travel
Sports
Videos
Audio
CNN Underscored
Coupons
Weather
About CNN
US
FOLLOW CNN
Terms of Use Privacy Policy Ad Choices Accessibility & CC About Newsletters Transcripts
© 2023 Cable News Network. A Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All Rights Reserved.
CNN Sans ™ & © 2016 Cable News Network.