Trinity
Gay wanted to follow in the footsteps of her father Tyson Gay, her mother
said. (FACEBOOK)
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The daughter of Olympic
sprinter Tyson Gay was following in her father’s fast footsteps before she was
struck down and killed by a stray bullet early Sunday outside a Kentucky
eatery.
New
York Daily News report continues:
Fifteen-year-old
Trinity Gay, herself a rising track star, was innocently hanging out with
friends when she was randomly shot in the neck outside a barbecue spot in
Lexington, police said.
The
fatal shooting happened at the Lexington barbeque restaurant Cook Out.
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“She
was so innocent, she was so innocent,” her mother, Shoshana Boyd, told the
Daily News in a tearful interview.
“I
just want people to stop shooting and realize who they’re hurting. It’s just
random. They don’t understand, they don’t understand who they’re hurting.”
Boyd
said her daughter wanted to become a surgeon — but also hoped to match the
athletic glory of her famous father.
“I
should never have to bury my child,” Boyd said. “She wanted to be the fastest
woman in the world, and they took that away from her.”
Before
she was shot at about 4 a.m., Trinity nearly live-tweeted her own death,
posting a note about gunfire at the late-night eatery Cook Out.
“Of
course they start shootin’,” Trinity wrote.
Trinity
appeared to reference the restaurant in her final tweet, writing right before 3
a.m., “Why is cookout fat.”
Police
said people in two cars exchanged gunfire outside the restaurant. Trinity was
not in either car, and her mother said she was out with friends.
A
suspect, Dvonta Middlebrooks, 21, was arrested and charged with wanton
endangerment and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon, police said.
Cops said he fired multiple shots at the time of the incident. It was unclear
whether they suspect him of firing the fatal bullet.
Another
man questioned by police has not been charged.
Gun
control advocates said Trinity’s death was more evidence of America’s weapons
epidemic.
“My
heart aches for Trinity’s family, friends and all of Lexington,” said Shannon
Watts, founder of Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense in America.
“This
is another example of the senseless gun violence that kills 91 Americans every
day and injures hundreds more. This is not the kind of America we want to live
in. Teenagers should be able to safely hang out with their friends without the
risk of being shot and killed. And no parent should have to bury a child killed
by gun violence.”
But
Kentucky Gov. Matt Bevin — a pro-gun Republican who has spoken at National
Rifle Association events — blamed the shooting on a “crumbling culture.”
“A
15 year old is dead ... This senseless tragedy is one more sad example of a
crumbling culture ... Truly heartbreaking!” the Republican governor tweeted.
The
NRA did not return requests for comment.
Trinity
was a top sprinter at Lafayette High School, the same high school where her
father blazed a trail before becoming a four-time U.S. champion in the 100
meters and representing Team USA in three Summer Olympics.
His
career was stained after he tested positive for steroids in 2013, and had to
forfeit a silver medal from the 2012 London Games. But his daughter vowed to
make up for it with her own honors.
“When
her dad got disqualified, her text to him was, ‘Daddy, it’s OK, I’m gonna get
the gold for you,” her grandmother Daisy Lowe told The News.
“There
was no doubt in our minds that was going to happen,” Lowe said. “Not only did
we get cheated, the world got cheated.”
Trinity
came in fourth in last year’s girls 100-meters state championship, where she
competed against older runners.
Lowe
said Trinity visited her father in Florida just last week, on her fall break.
Tyson
Gay rushed from his suburban Orlando home to Lexington after hearing the
heartbreaking news.
“She
didn’t make it,” he told WLEX soon after her death. “It’s so crazy. I have no
idea what happened.”
His
daughter’s death sparked an online outcry that was fit for an all-star athlete.
“Sending
our thoughts & prayers to @TysonLGay & his loved ones as they mourn the
tragic & senseless loss of his daughter, Trinity,” USA Track & Field
tweeted.
“Heavy
heart today for Tyson Gay and his family,” Olympic hurdler Lolo Jones wrote.
Trinity’s
coach, Crystal Washington, remembered her as a popular girl and good student.
“The
kids were really close with her,” Washington told the Lexington Herald-Leader. “We’ve
got to do something.”
“Our hearts are broken this morning over the loss of Trinity to this tragic and senseless act of violence,” Fayette County Superintendent Manny Caulk said in a statement.
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