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Lincoln wide receiver Steven Thorpe has his pass intercepted early in the game by Valdosta High Wildcat Sidney Bivens during a September 2007 game at Bazemore-Hyder Stadium. Bivens was killed during a shooting incident Sunday in Valdosta.


John Fretti


James Wright


This is the alley between apartments at Hudson Dockett where nine people where shot and one was killed Sunday evening in Valdosta.


Published November 16, 2009 11:38 pm -

City leaders search for answers to violent crimes in Valdosta


By Johnna Pinholster

VALDOSTA — Sidney Bivens’ untimely passing on Sunday evening added to a growing list of violent crimes in Valdosta since May.

Community leaders are now questioning why and discussing what can be done to curb the violence.

Valdosta City Councilman James Wright, District 1, represents the area where the mass shooting occurred.

“When I got word about the shooting, I rode over to Hudson Dockett to see what was going on,” Wright said. “I was told that several people had been shot and one had been killed.”

He said he later checked The Valdosta Daily Times Web site after returning home and learned that the death had been confirmed.

“I was disappointed, frightened, but most of all frustrated by the news,” he said. “Something has to be done to deal with the issues in the community.”

Wright is working on a plan that will incorporate the local government, churches, the community, schools and businesses in combating crime in the area.

“It was shocking and it was a disappointing reflection on the state of our personal respect for each other, and the choices that these people made during a time of conflict,” Mayor John Fretti said.

What disappointed him more, Fretti said, was that children came around to

watch the conflict, whether or not they were allowed by their parents. Because they witnessed the

shootings and became victims of the shootings, he fears they might adopt the same violent behaviors as an answer to conflict in their own lives.

Several outreach services are already available in the community, from neighborhood watches to the Boys and Girls Club, but Fretti feels the community may need to do more.

“I think the city needs to increase our efforts into awareness and education of alternatives to violence and the importance of personal respect, and even if we have to have a character initiative,” Fretti said, “because some of this may be a result of some of our youth not having a high degree of self-respect and we can infuse that using our businesses, our government and our churches.”

Mark Stalvey, executive director of the Valdosta Housing Authority, said a random incident such as the Sunday night shooting casts a bad light on the housing developments.

“With it being such a random event, the shooter and others involved weren’t actual residents, we feel more like a victim of circumstance than anything else,” Stalvey said. “It could have happened at the mall or wherever they found this guy they were looking for from what I understand.”



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