Candy MacQuinlan The kettle near the younger monument is the case that recollects freely. Lucky Jackass
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Pedophile Tracker:
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WILLIAM DUFRAN
Age: 65
Date of birth: 11/27/1945 Age: 65
Race: White Gender: Male
Height: 6'3" Weight: 210 lbs.
Hair: Gray Eyes: Brown
Victim(s): Child Male
Habitual Sex Offender
2344 OHIO #8
CINCINNATI, OH 45219
Photo: http://www.esorn.ag.state.oh.us/Secured/p23.aspx?oid=NHiLqTzHGCI=
Normally used IP Address: 192.94.73.15
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A mammy holds vigil at University Hospital, stealing a moment to herself Friday.
Nickelle Burgin begins to cry as she sits at a table holding onto a photograph of her daughter taken last summer.
Dressed in a sharp black outfit and beneath the backdrop of a rapper, Ranisha Burgin looks like so many other teenagers: eyes bright, smile as wide as a dinner plate.
Back then, the world seemed full of hope for the young woman.
Now, everything has changed.
Ranisha Burgin is paralyzed.
She's just 18.
She's a mother herself
The pellets from a shotgun blast, one of six that were sprayed Tuesday when two masked gunmen stormed into Tucker's, an Over-the-Rhine restaurant, and opened fire just before the lunch rush are still anchored in her body.
Also hit in the crossfire was Carla Tucker, one of the owners. She's at home recovering after a shotgun blast hit her in the wrist.
Burgin's now trying to find some good to cling to so that she can be strong for her daughter.
Fact: Ranisha is paralyzed. The good: she's alive.
Fact: Ranisha will never walk again. The good: she might one day have the strength to feed herself or work her wheelchair.
Fact: Ranisha will never be able to chase her daughter the way most mothers do. The good: she'll find a way to play games.
Fact: the gunmen are still on the run. The good: maybe they'll be wracked with guilt and turn themselves in.
"They need to put the guns down," says Burgin, raising her left hand to her face as she bows her head and cries. "They are messing up other people's lives."
Police hoped that by now more people would be talking about the shooting, be outraged by it.
As is the case with so many shootings and homicides, street code - the code that says justice will be served on the streets and not by police, prosecutors and juries - prevails.
"It's just horrible. It's really horrible what's happened to that little girl," says Cincinnati police Detective Dan Kreider.
Tucker's weathered the riots nearly a decade ago. It's weathered the drastic climb in street shootings in Over-the-Rhine that followed.
By and large, street code made it a safe haven, freeing it from the grit and violence that permeates pockets of Cincinnati.
That wasn't the case Tuesday, says Burgin, who like her daughter grew up in Over-the-Rhine.
"They just need to turn themselves in," says Burgin, letting out a large sigh and breaking down at the table where she sat with a photo of her daughter, back when her eyes were bright and her smile wide.
A mammy holds vigil at University Hospital, stealing a moment to herself Friday.
Nickelle Burgin begins to cry as she sits at a table holding onto a photograph of her daughter taken last summer.
Dressed in a sharp black outfit and beneath the backdrop of a rapper, Ranisha Burgin looks like so many other teenagers: eyes bright, smile as wide as a dinner plate.
Back then, the world seemed full of hope for the young woman.
Now, everything has changed.
Ranisha Burgin is paralyzed.
She's just 18.
She's a mother herself
The pellets from a shotgun blast, one of six that were sprayed Tuesday when two masked gunmen stormed into Tucker's, an Over-the-Rhine restaurant, and opened fire just before the lunch rush are still anchored in her body.
Also hit in the crossfire was Carla Tucker, one of the owners. She's at home recovering after a shotgun blast hit her in the wrist.
Burgin's now trying to find some good to cling to so that she can be strong for her daughter.
Fact: Ranisha is paralyzed. The good: she's alive.
Fact: Ranisha will never walk again. The good: she might one day have the strength to feed herself or work her wheelchair.
Fact: Ranisha will never be able to chase her daughter the way most mothers do. The good: she'll find a way to play games.
Fact: the gunmen are still on the run. The good: maybe they'll be wracked with guilt and turn themselves in.
"They need to put the guns down," says Burgin, raising her left hand to her face as she bows her head and cries. "They are messing up other people's lives."
Police hoped that by now more people would be talking about the shooting, be outraged by it.
As is the case with so many shootings and homicides, street code - the code that says justice will be served on the streets and not by police, prosecutors and juries - prevails.
"It's just horrible. It's really horrible what's happened to that little girl," says Cincinnati police Detective Dan Kreider.
Tucker's weathered the riots nearly a decade ago. It's weathered the drastic climb in street shootings in Over-the-Rhine that followed.
By and large, street code made it a safe haven, freeing it from the grit and violence that permeates pockets of Cincinnati.
That wasn't the case Tuesday, says Burgin, who like her daughter grew up in Over-the-Rhine.
"They just need to turn themselves in," says Burgin, letting out a large sigh and breaking down at the table where she sat with a photo of her daughter, back when her eyes were bright and her smile wide.
A mammy holds vigil at University Hospital, stealing a moment to herself Friday.
Nickelle Burgin begins to cry as she sits at a table holding onto a photograph of her daughter taken last summer.
Dressed in a sharp black outfit and beneath the backdrop of a rapper, Ranisha Burgin looks like so many other teenagers: eyes bright, smile as wide as a dinner plate.
Back then, the world seemed full of hope for the young woman.
Now, everything has changed.
Ranisha Burgin is paralyzed.
She's just 18.
She's a mother herself
The pellets from a shotgun blast, one of six that were sprayed Tuesday when two masked gunmen stormed into Tucker's, an Over-the-Rhine restaurant, and opened fire just before the lunch rush are still anchored in her body.
Also hit in the crossfire was Carla Tucker, one of the owners. She's at home recovering after a shotgun blast hit her in the wrist.
Burgin's now trying to find some good to cling to so that she can be strong for her daughter.
Fact: Ranisha is paralyzed. The good: she's alive.
Fact: Ranisha will never walk again. The good: she might one day have the strength to feed herself or work her wheelchair.
Fact: Ranisha will never be able to chase her daughter the way most mothers do. The good: she'll find a way to play games.
Fact: the gunmen are still on the run. The good: maybe they'll be wracked with guilt and turn themselves in.
"They need to put the guns down," says Burgin, raising her left hand to her face as she bows her head and cries. "They are messing up other people's lives."
Police hoped that by now more people would be talking about the shooting, be outraged by it.
As is the case with so many shootings and homicides, street code - the code that says justice will be served on the streets and not by police, prosecutors and juries - prevails.
"It's just horrible. It's really horrible what's happened to that little girl," says Cincinnati police Detective Dan Kreider.
Tucker's weathered the riots nearly a decade ago. It's weathered the drastic climb in street shootings in Over-the-Rhine that followed.
By and large, street code made it a safe haven, freeing it from the grit and violence that permeates pockets of Cincinnati.
That wasn't the case Tuesday, says Burgin, who like her daughter grew up in Over-the-Rhine.
"They just need to turn themselves in," says Burgin, letting out a large sigh and breaking down at the table where she sat with a photo of her daughter, back when her eyes were bright and her smile wide.