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In “The Curse”, our feature article which hits streets tomorrow, New Times tells the tragic story of Carol City High’s Class of 2006, which has lost six of its members to arbitrary street deaths, including five to gunfire. These were “good” kids- none of them involved in gangs or the drug trade- and the most recent death happened just last May, when 21-year old graduate Brian Dupree, a father of two known for an incessant sense of humor, was killed in a driveby while sitting in his girlfriend’s car outside of his family’s Miami Gardens home.
In my reporting, I was moved by my conversation with Tim, Brian’s best friend since their days at Carol City Middle. He’s a hulking former defensive tackle, bovine head topped with a stickers-still-on Mets hat and chin adorned with a scraggly beard, who took a seat on a porch swing in front of his house on a December Saturday to chat with me. He’s still very much in mourning- a fresh crucifix tattoo bearing Brian’s name peels on his right forearm- and he told me what it’s like to lose an inseparable pal, and have a very strong hunch who did it. In his own words, after the jump:
team- I work at the Pembroke Pines store, usually every night from 9 at
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I’ll never forget that night. I work at Home Depot, on the inventory
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remains unsolved. But informed rumors fly. The streets fingered one man
for the crime- a scrawny 21-year old neighborhood thug, one-half of an
identical twin duo with long and violent rap sheets. One of the rumored
motives had Brian, a notorious lady’s man, hooking up with the
criminal’s ex-girlfriend. Charles Dupree says the cops told him he was
their number one suspect, but with no witnesses coming forward, they
couldn’t make the arrest. Tim told me how he struggled against the
temptation for payback.
I was beyond anger. If it wasn’t God on my side, I would’ve done something crazy.
I knew the dude. I was at a party, and as I was mixing myself a
drink, he reached into my waistband and grabbed a pistol I had on me. He put it in my face. No reason. He was laughing.
He was just one of those cats that wanted to be thug, tried to be ghetto. I didn’t know for sure it was him that killed Brian. There were so many rumors flying around.
All I would hear back is, “Don’t worry about it; I’m good. Be there for my family.”
So that’s what I did. If I did something stupid, I could’ve been locked up or dead myself.
One morning, I woke up and saw about 40 missed calls on my phone. I
called my homeboy, and he says, “Where were you last night?” I tell
him, sleeping. He goes, “For sure?”
He says, “_______ just got murked.”
Two months after Brian’s murder, the supposed number one suspect in
the case was killed in a driveby. He left behind a one-year old
daughter. Both killings remain unsolved.