Man
executed
in Bel Air shootout
By Michel Outridge |
Last night a man called Axel Williams, who reportedly was the bodyguard of a popular city businessman, was executed in Ireng Street, Bel Air Park, in the vehicle in which he was driving. The vehicle, parked at the corner of Ireng and Ituni Streets, was riddled with bullets, its ignition still on. The
vehicle PHH 8117, belonging to Ashton & Debra Funeral Parlour,
was at the time reportedly being driven by the-now-dead man who was
confronted by a lone gunman around 7.15 p.m. as he was attempting to
turn the corner after dropping off the businessman at his home. Residents
said the usual silence was shattered when gunshots erupted; they
said some 12 shots were heard. The
window of a car which was parked at the corner of Ireng Street was
shattered; the police secured the scene and picked up the spent
shells, which belonged to an M-70 rifle, strewn in and around
the vehicle. From
all indications the execution was well orchestrated. One
resident said that as the vehicle was turning, two men on a
motorcycle rode up. One man came off the bike and the other rode
off. The
lone gunman then opened fire on the vehicle, leaving the driver's
body riddled with bullets. Minutes
after the gunfire ended the police took the body away. Residents
said that after the shooting the motorcycle returned for the gunman
and they rode off calmly in the direction of Duncan Street. An
eyewitness said that the gunman was speaking on his cell
phone before he opened fire as if he was being informed
of the dead man's movements. "The
man in the vehicle had no chance because the gunman walked up and
discharged about a dozen odd rounds at him, even though he initially
attempted to return fire," said a resident. One
unconfirmed report stated that the dead man was attached to the
feared "Phantom Force"
and was fingered in the shooting to death of a food vendor early
last year. Thursday, December 11, 2003 |