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- <text id=94TT1267>
- <link 94TO0202>
- <title>
- Sep. 19, 1994: Cover:Crime:Murder in Miniature
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Sep. 19, 1994 So Young to Kill, So Young to Die
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER/CRIME, Page 54
- Murder in Miniature
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> At the age of 11, "Yummy" Sandifer killed and was killed. His
- short, violent life is a haunting tale.
- </p>
- <p>By Nancy R. Gibbs--Reported by Julie Grace and Jon D. Hull/Chicago
- </p>
- <p> On a bright September afternoon last week, the mothers of Chicago's
- South Side brought their children to a vigil for a dead boy
- they had never met. They wanted their kids to see the scrawny
- corpse in the loose tan suit lying in a coffin, next to his
- stuffed animals, finally harmless. The big kids dragged the
- little kids up to look at the stitches on his face where the
- bullets fired into the back of his head had torn through. The
- only picture the family could find for the funeral program was
- a mug shot. "Take a good look," said the Rev. Willie James Campbell.
- "Cry if you will, but make up your mind that you will never
- let your life end like this."
- </p>
- <p> Parents hoped to haunt their children; maybe fear would keep
- them safe. Lynn Jeneta, 29, took her nine-year-old son Ron.
- If he got scared enough, she decided, "maybe then he wouldn't
- be lying there himself one of these days." She pushed him right
- up to the coffin. Ron tried to stay calm. "Some kids said Yummy
- looked like he was sleeping, but he didn't look like he was
- sleeping to me." What exactly then did he look like? "Kind of
- like he was gone, you know?" His composure melts. "When Mama
- pushed me forward, I thought I was going to fall right in the
- damn coffin. That gives me nightmares, you know? Can you imagine
- falling into a coffin?"
- </p>
- <p> Many who knew Robert ("Yummy") Sandifer better mourned him less.
- "Nobody didn't like that boy. Nobody gonna miss him," said Morris
- Anderson, 13. Anderson used to get into fistfights with Yummy,
- who received the nickname because of his love of cookies and
- Snickers bars. "He was a crooked son of a bitch," said a local
- grocer, who had barred him from the store for stealing so much.
- "Always in trouble. He stood out there on the corner and strong-armed
- other kids. No one is sorry to see him gone."
- </p>
- <p> Nor, it seems, was anyone very surprised. The neighborhood was
- still grieving its other dead child, the girl Yummy allegedly
- killed two weeks ago, when he was supposed to fire on some rival
- gang members but shot 14-year-old Shavon Dean instead. Police
- descended on the gang, and Yummy became a liability. So he became
- a victim too. When he was found dead in a bloody mud puddle
- under a railway viaduct three days later, an entire city shuddered
- and clutched its children and looked for lessons.
- </p>
- <p> The mayor of Chicago admitted that Yummy had slipped through
- the cracks. Just what cracks were those? The sharp crevices
- that trap children and break them into cruel little pieces.
- Chicago's authorities had known about Yummy for years. He was
- born to a teenage addict mother and a father now in jail. As
- a baby he was burned and beaten. As a student he often missed
- more days of school than he attended. As a ripening thug he
- shuttled between homes and detention centers and the safe houses
- maintained by his gang. The police arrested him again and again
- and again; but the most they could do under Illinois law was
- put him on probation. Thirteen local juvenile homes wouldn't
- take him because he was too young.
- </p>
- <p> Before they grow up, these children can become walking weapons.
- One very mean little boy didn't grow up, so he became an icon
- instead. The crimes he committed--and those he suffered--shook the country's conscience in a way that violent acts with
- far larger body counts no longer do. "If ever there was a case
- where the kid's future was predictable, it was this case," says
- Cook County public guardian Patrick Murphy. "What you've got
- here is a kid who was made and turned into a sociopath by the
- time he was three years old." Yummy's mother Lorina called him,
- without irony, "an average 11-year-old." The courts and cops
- and probation officers and psychologists who tracked his criminal
- career all agree. "I see a lot of Roberts," says Cook County
- Circuit Judge Thomas Sumner, who handled charges against Yummy
- for armed robbery and car theft. "We see this 100 times a week,"
- says Murphy.
- </p>
- <p> The proof is in the paperwork--worn folders inches thick,
- filed at the public guardian's office, the courts, the police
- headquarters and now the medical examiner's office. Yummy's
- files are indistinguishable from the records of thousands of
- other urban American kids. The evidence--if more evidence
- is really necessary--is overwhelming: when a child's brain
- is flooded, the child eventually drowns.
- </p>
- <p> That was the verdict of a psychiatric evaluation last November.
- "Robert is emotionally flooded," the confidential report reads.
- "His response to the flooding is to back away from demanding
- situations and act out impulsively and unpredictably." The examiner
- asked him to complete the sentence "I am very..." "Sick,"
- Yummy replied. The examiner saw a child full of self-hate, lonely,
- illiterate, wary. When he heard a walkie-talkie down the hall,
- he jumped from his seat, afraid of police. "You tryin' to trick
- me," he accused the examiner. There was not much doubt about
- how he came to be that way--only about whether anyone or anything
- could save him.
- </p>
- <p> Yummy's mother was the third of 10 children from four fathers--she never knew her own. When she was 15 she had her first
- son Lorenzo, then Victor, then Yummy and eventually five more.
- She dropped out of 10th grade, found an apartment, went on welfare
- and nursed a crack habit. For a while she tried living with
- Yummy's father Robert Akins, who was convicted of drug and weapons
- charges. They soon split because he had "a rather angry and
- hot temper," she told a social worker.
- </p>
- <p> So, apparently, did she. The first charge of child neglect was
- filed in 1984, when Lorina failed to follow doctors' orders
- for treating two-year-old Victor's eye condition. He eventually
- went blind. The following year 22-month-old Yummy arrived at
- Jackson Park Hospital covered with scratches and bruises. A
- few months later it was his sister, this time with second- and
- third-degree burns on her genitals. Lorina explained that the
- toddler had fallen on the radiator. An emergency-room nurse
- told the court that the injuries did not quite match the story.
- Someone probably held the child on the heater, the nurse testified.
- </p>
- <p> The courts finally moved in a year later, when neighbors told
- police that the five children were routinely being left at home
- alone. By the time they removed the kids, Yummy was a bundle
- of anger and scars. He had long welts on his left leg; police
- suspected he was beaten with an electrical cord. There were
- cigarette burns on his shoulders and buttocks. "I never beat
- my kids," Lorina insists to this day. She says the scars were
- caused by chicken pox, not cigarettes. "I gave him all the attention
- I could," she says of Yummy, but admits there were distractions.
- Now 29, she has been arrested 41 times, mainly for prostitution.
- </p>
- <p> "He shouldn't be dead," she says, sitting in her living room
- the day after his funeral. There is a white bucket in the corner
- with a live frog he caught a few weeks ago. "He liked to fish,"
- she says. "People think he was a monster, but he was nice to
- me." She says she saw him regularly; he called her Reen instead
- of Mom, and, she admits, "he was always blaming me" for his
- problems. "They could have saved him and rehabilitated him,"
- she insists. "When he started taking cars, they should have
- put him away then and given him therapy."
- </p>
- <p> From early on, the child-welfare workers had little hope for
- Lorina as a parent. "There is no reason to believe that Lorina
- Sandifer will ever be able to adequately meet her own needs,
- let alone to meet the needs of her growing family," a psychiatrist
- reported to the juvenile court in 1986. And so Yummy and his
- brothers and sister were placed with his grandmother, Janie
- Fields, whom Yummy took to calling Mama. Her prognosis as a
- caregiver was not much more promising. The psychiatric report
- described Fields as "a very controlling, domineering, castrating
- woman with a rather severe borderline personality disorder."
- </p>
- <p> Neighbors in the black working-class neighborhood called Roseland
- still remember the day Janie Fields moved into a two-story,
- three-bedroom house with her brood: nearly all her 10 children
- and 30 grandchildren lived with her at one time or another.
- "They are dirty and noisy, and they are ruining the neighborhood,"
- complained a neighbor. Residents launched an unsuccessful petition
- drive to force Fields out. "All those kids are little troublemakers,"
- said Carl McClinton, 23, who lives down the street. "This is
- the kind of neighborhood where we all look after each other's
- kids, but they are a rougher breed."
- </p>
- <p> The neighborhood kids describe two different Yummy Sandifers.
- There is the bully, the extortionist, the fierce fighter who
- would take on the big kids and beat them. "Yummy would ask you
- for 50 cents," says Steve Nelson, 11, "and if he knew you were
- scared and you gave him the money, he'd ask for another 50 cents."
- Erica Williams, 20, a neighbor, says, "You really can't describe
- how bad he really was. He'd curse you completely out. He broke
- in school, took money, burned cars."
- </p>
- <p> Others recall a sweeter side. Lulu Washington sells discount
- candy out of her house, just across from Yummy's. "He just wanted
- love," she says. For that, he could be disarmingly kind. "He'd
- say thank you, excuse me, pardon me." He loved animals and basketball
- and had a way with bicycles. He once even merged two bikes into
- a single, working tandem. Those were the good times. "It always
- meant trouble when he was with a group," says Ollie Jones-Edwards,
- 54. "If he was alone, he was sweet as jelly."
- </p>
- <p> Yummy liked great big cars, Lincolns and Cadillacs, says Micaiah
- Peterson, 17. "He could drive real well. It was like a midget
- driving a luxury car." Sometimes he hung out at the local garage,
- learning about alternators and fuel injectors. When he wasn't
- stealing cars, he was throwing things at them or setting them
- on fire. "What could you do?" asks McClinton. "Tell his grandmother?
- She'd yell at him, and he'd be right back on the street. If
- the police picked him up, they'd just bring him back home because
- he was too young to lock up. He was untouchable, and he knew
- that."
- </p>
- <p> His odds of reaching the age of 12 dropped sharply when he fell
- in with the local Black Disciples gang. Several thousand or
- so gang members in Chicago are spread out across separate fiefdoms,
- led by "ministers" in their 30s and 40s who are always recruiting
- children. There is plenty of work for everyone: car theft, drug
- running, prostitution, extortion, credit-card fraud. Police
- suspect that gang leaders use the little ones as drug runners
- and hit men because they are too young to be seriously punished
- if they are caught.
- </p>
- <p> On the other hand, they aren't likely to last long. "If you
- make it to 19 around here, you are a senior citizen," says Terrance
- Green, 19. "If you live past that, you're doing real good."
- A Black Disciple named Keith, 17, describes the role the youngest
- members play: "He's this small little punk but wants a name,
- right? So you make him do the work. `Hey, homey, get me a car.
- A red car. A red sports car. By tonight. I'm taking my woman
- out. Or hey, homey, go find me $50. Or hey, little homey, you
- wanna be big? Go pop that nigger that's messing with our business."
- </p>
- <p> Yummy averaged a felony a month for the last year and a half
- of his life; 23 felonies and five misdemeanors in all. Ann O'Callaghan,
- a lawyer and assistant public guardian, met Yummy once, last
- December in court. She was astounded by his size and demeanor.
- "Some of these kids we represent are ominous characters. But
- I had to bend over, and I was like, `Hi! My name is Ann, and
- I'm your lawyer.' I couldn't believe it." Yummy wasn't the least
- bit intimidated by the courtroom. "It was like he was just sitting
- there waiting for a bus."
- </p>
- <p> Last fall Yummy was placed with the Lawrence Hall Youth Services,
- which runs homes for troubled teenagers. He ran away in February
- and went back to his grandmother until June, when he spent two
- weeks in a detention facility. In July, Yummy and his cousin
- Darryl went on a church trip to Six Flags Great America, an
- hour north of the city. "Yummy couldn't get on most of the rides,"
- Darryl says. "He was too small." On another day a neighbor,
- Ida Falls, took Yummy and 12 other kids to the local police
- station to see a film on crime. The cops asked her not to bring
- him back because he got into fights with other children. On
- Aug. 15 he was charged in another burglary. By Aug. 28 he would
- be firing the fatal bullets--and it would be too late.
- </p>
- <p> Falls' niece Shavon Dean lived around the corner from Yummy
- and had known him growing up. One August Sunday night she was
- sitting in the kitchen eating Doritos, while her mother Deborah
- was out back grilling ribs and chicken for a family barbecue.
- Shavon slipped out for a few minutes to walk a friend home.
- She never made it back.
- </p>
- <p> George Knox, a gang researcher at Chicago State University,
- believes Yummy was sent on a specific mission of revenge sparked
- by a drug feud or a personal insult. "If it was just an initiation
- ceremony, he'd do it from a car. But to go right up to the victims,
- that means he was trying to collect some points and get some
- rank or maybe a nice little cash bonus." Yummy opened fire with
- a 9-mm semiautomatic into a crowd of kids playing football.
- Sammy Seay, 16, was struck in the hand. "I hit the ground,"
- says Seay. "It was the second or third shot before I knew I
- had been shot. So I got up and I just ran, trying to save my
- life." Shavon was struck in the head and died within minutes.
- "Shavon never got a chance, never got a chance," her mother
- says.
- </p>
- <p> Yummy spent the last three days of his life on the run. Gang
- members shuttled him between safe houses and abandoned buildings
- as police swooped down on the neighborhood, searching for the
- shooter, followed by a flock of reporters. Gang leaders felt
- the pressure. "He was like a trapped animal with everyone after
- him," says Knox. "He was the hunter, and then he was the prey."
- </p>
- <p> Maybe Yummy figured out that the gang's protection was not worth
- much. Janie Fields last spoke to Yummy Wednesday afternoon before
- he died. "He said, `What is the police looking for me for?'
- I said, `I'm coming to get you.' I had clothes with me 'cause
- I knew he was probably filthy and dirty. My heart was racing.
- I said, `You ain't done nothing wrong, just let me come and
- get you.'" The phone went dead. She went to 95th Street, where
- he said he would be. "He wasn't there."
- </p>
- <p> But he appeared that night on a neighbor's porch, visibly frightened,
- asking that she call his grandmother so he could turn himself
- in. He asked if they could say a prayer together. The neighbor
- went to make the call, and when she came back, he was gone.
- The police can only guess what happened next. Derrick Hardaway,
- 14, and his brother Cragg, 16, both honor students and fellow
- gang members, found Yummy and promised that they could help
- him get out of town. They drove him to a railroad underpass,
- a dark tunnel marbled with gang graffiti. Yummy's body was found
- lying in the mud, with two bullet wounds in the back of his
- head.
- </p>
- <p> Now it's the Hardaway brothers' turn. Authorities say gang leaders,
- who can easily order hits in any prison in the state, may have
- the Hardaways targeted next. Both boys were arrested and are
- being held in protective custody. As for the other children
- in Yummy's neighborhood, when they are asked what would make
- them feel safer, most give the same answer: getting a gun. Among
- other things, it would protect them from the children who already
- have them.
- </p>
- <p> There were those who were missing Yummy last week, those who
- had seen the child and not the killer. "Everyone thinks he was
- a bad person, but he respected my mom, who's got cancer," says
- Kenyata Jones, 12. Yummy used to come over to Jones' house several
- times a month for sleep-overs. "We'd bake cookies and brownies
- and rent movies like the old Little Rascals in black and white,"
- says Jones. "He was my friend, you know? I just cried and cried
- at school when I heard about what happened," he says, plowing
- both hands into his pants pockets for comfort before returning
- to his house to take care of his mother. "And I'm gonna cry
- some more today, and I'm gonna cry some more tomorrow too."
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-