Pubdate: Mon, 09 Feb 2004
Source: Times-Picayune, The (LA)
http://www.nola.com/news/t-p/frontpage/index.ssf?/base/news-1/107631153271860.xml
Copyright: 2004 The Times-Picayune
Contact:  http://www.nola.com/t-p/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/848
Author: Tara Young

Series: Day Two - Article Two

TURF WAR RISES OUT OF ASHES OF ST. THOMAS, TRAPPING FAMILY

Those who wanted Robert Pittman dead finally caught up with him on Easter 
as he napped in his truck after partying at a nearby club.

The murder near Orleans and North Claiborne avenues fell within the seven 
square miles of the city that police targeted as a "hot zone" after the 
number of killings skyrocketed early in 2003. Pittman was the year's 85th 
murder.

More specifically, his death was one in a rash of killings that police 
associate with a turf war that simmered after the St. Thomas public housing 
development was torn down and its residents scattered to other public 
housing sites, particularly the St. Bernard development.

According to his mother, Pittman, 24, was a marked man once police arrested 
him in August 2002 and accused him of killing Alfred Edwards, 22, and 
wounding another man that June in the St. Bernard public housing complex.

The Edwards and Pittman families say the bloodshed stemmed from the 
Downtown-Uptown rivalry among drug dealers that grew deadlier as foes found 
themselves living cheek by jowl in the St. Bernard development.

Warren Riley, chief of operations for the New Orleans Police Department, 
said a task force was formed to identify problem residents from both the 
former St. Thomas and the St. Bernard complexes.

In 2002, the St. Bernard development recorded 13 slayings. Twelve people 
were killed there last year.

A "significant portion" of the violence can be attributed to the turf wars, 
Riley said. However, he added, the situation is slowly improving.

"I think the main characters have been eliminated through murdering each 
other, and the other portion has been eliminated by going to jail," he 
said. "They have eliminated themselves."

After leaving St. Thomas in 1999, Pittman's family lived within a block of 
the St. Bernard development in a modest brick home in the 1200 block of 
Harrison Avenue. Pittman's mother, who asked that her name not be 
published, said her family never felt welcome.

Pittman was arrested in August 2002, two months after police say he opened 
fire on a car and fatally shot Edwards in the 1400 block of Senate Street. 
More bloodshed followed.

The next to die was Pittman's cousin, Antoine Cooper, 22, who was shot 
inside his truck near Martin Luther King Boulevard and South Claiborne 
Avenue on Aug. 19, 2002.

His father was next. Robert Robbins was gunned down on Sept. 8 near 
Buchanan and Senate streets.

After the second slaying in three weeks, Pittman's mother went into hiding.

"I just left," she said, recalling the night her husband was killed. "I had 
a dress on. My family just put me in the car and whisked me away."

She returned to the Harrison Avenue home three months later, in December, 
and packed in the dark.

"I didn't want anyone to know that I was there," she said.

On Christmas Eve 2002, the district attorney's office refused the charges 
against Pittman in Edwards' slaying. All seemed quiet as 2003 began.

Pittman's mother said she spoke to her son on April 20, just hours before 
he was killed. He seemed to have been at ease -- so comfortable, in fact, 
that he left friends at a club to get some sleep in his truck. Someone 
walked up and opened fire; he died at Charity Hospital. According to the 
coroner's office, he had alcohol in his system but no drugs.

Pittman, police say, was a drug dealer. His rap sheet showed two drug 
arrests, three felony arrests involving a firearm and 10 misdemeanor arrests.

His mother, though, characterized him as a good son and the father of six 
children who was unfairly targeted by police.

She said she does not believe her son killed Edwards. Looking back, 
however, she believes his arrest led to his death, as well as those of his 
cousin and father.