Killing renews concerns for homeless Native Americans
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — The morning a homeless man was shot and killed in Albuquerque, police say surveillance videos showed him running down a street before sunrise, and then gunfire flash in the dark.
Ronnie Ross, a 50-year-old from the Navajo Nation town of Shiprock, had been shot a dozen times, including once in the forehead and temple, and four times in the back, according to a criminal complaint. Police say the two teenage suspects charged with murder this week apparently shot him “for fun” as they came and went from a hotel party nearby.
The homicide marked the latest in a series of brazen killings and assaults of homeless Native Americans in the city. In Albuquerque, Native Americans make up only 4 per cent of the population, but account for 44 per cent of people living on the streets, raising the likelihood they will be victimized when there is an attack on the homeless.
A 2014 survey showed 75 per cent of homeless Native Americans in Albuquerque had been physically assaulted.