For the families of victims killed in unsolved murders, life is at a standstill.
The Enquirer is highlighting a series of cold cases, summarized and analyzed by the journalists whose careers largely focus on unsolved murders: the creators of Cincinnati.com's Accused podcast. If you have any information on any unsolved case, please reach out to the appropriate law enforcement agency. Suggestions for cases to highlight can be sent to [email protected].
The crime: When Vanessa Huffaker tries to picture the scene that took her brother's life, she can't make sense of it.
Marcell Huffaker, 52, was at a friend's apartment in East Price Hill having some drinks May 29, 2018. He and the friend decided to go to the store to pick up more beverages, so they set out to walk toward a car about 10:40 p.m.
As soon as they reached the building's parking lot, Vanessa Huffaker said the friend fired two gunshots into the air.
"And the next thing you know, Marcell was shot in the chest from another direction," the 53-year-old said. "And the friend took off running."
She said police have told her the slaying was likely committed by someone randomly firing gunshots toward the apartment complex. If that's true, she has some questions. Like why was there only one shot fired and how did it happen to hit her brother in the chest? What was the purpose of the friend's two gunshots that preceded it? Was that random, too, or was it a signal to someone else?
"It don't make sense to me," she said.
The victim: Ask Vanessa Huffaker what her brother was like, and her 21-year-old daughter chimes in from across the room.
"You know you're about to laugh when he comes into the room," said Shania Brown, who considered Marcell her favorite uncle. "Like, you better get ready to crack up. Y'all know he's coming in with a joke."
Uncle Bone, as Brown called Huffaker, even took his comedy to the stage, performing stand-up at some clubs, his sister said.
"He was so damn funny all the time. Whoo!" she said, then apologized for cursing. "They just took a piece of us away from us."
Life for Huffaker wasn't always fun. He was an addict, his sister said, and court records show a few related run-ins with police.
"I'm not gonna lie," she said. "But he was getting his life together. My brother was very active in the neighborhoods and would get out and play with the teenagers and talk to them about don't get on drugs."
Part of getting his act together meant working on his comedy in clubs.
"He was doing good in that," Vanessa Huffaker said. "I mean, real good. He was the funniest person you could ever want to be around."
The scene: Cincinnati Police have surveillance video of the actual shooting, she said. It shows her brother and his friend walking out of the apartment building shoulder to shoulder.
"They're standing side by side and only he got shot?" she said, incredulous. "I'm not an investigator or nothing, but I'm not dumb. Something ain't right about that."
The video doesn't show the shooter.
Police happened to be patrolling nearby because of a spate of violence in the neighborhood and heard the gunshots. Medics worked to revive Huffaker for 15 minutes but failed.
"They shot my brother dead on the sidewalk," she said. "He didn't deserve to die like that."
Got tips? The three-year anniversary of Huffaker's death is approaching, and his family is growing frustrated. Vanessa Huffaker said she's been drowning in rumors and theories since her brother's death, and she's worried that police aren't giving each proper attention. Knowing what happened won't bring her brother back, she said, but it would help the family grieve.
"We just feel like we deserve a reason why you took my brother," she said.
People with information on Wynn's case can call Cincinnati Police's homicide unit at 513-352-3542 or Crime Stoppers at 513-352-3040.
Accused, reported by Enquirer journalists Amber Hunt and Amanda Rossmann, is an award-winning podcast investigating cold cases with three seasons available on all mainstream platforms such as Apple Podcasts and also at www.accusedpodcast.com.
Source link