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'Give our young people something better': West Palm rallies against gun violence

Attendees at Rally for Peace in West Palm Beach support mother of Riviera Beach gun violence victim, whose murder remains unsolved, at event in Coleman Park on June 6, 2026.
Jake Shore
/
SA国际传谋 News
Attendees at Rally for Peace in West Palm Beach support mother of Riviera Beach gun violence victim, whose murder remains unsolved, at event in Coleman Park on June 6, 2026.

Against the backdrop of declining homicides, an anti-gun violence group hosted a 鈥淩ally for Peace鈥 in West Palm Beach last weekend, supporting families of shooting victims and promoting resources for young men in violent neighborhoods.

The event Saturday organized by Inner City Innovators saw more than 100 people turn out, donned in orange shirts 鈥 the color for gun violence awareness 鈥 at Coleman Park鈥檚 gymnasium, near the once-deadly Tamarind corridor.

Ricky Aiken founded the group more than a decade ago, responding to a spike in violence in the neighborhood. He said Inner City Innovators started out informally in 2015. Volunteers rented vans, responding to shootings by taking young people away from the area where they occurred, in order to prevent retaliation.

The next step, he said, was to mentor young men as part of the 鈥淗ope Dealer鈥 program.

鈥淕rowing up, the only role models I had to look up to were the neighborhood dope dealers,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e wanted to go back to our communities and give our young people something better to look up to.鈥

The rally occurred as Palm Beach County has seen a stark decline in homicides.

READ MORE: Revisiting 'Young Survivors: The Unspoken Trauma of Gun Violence,' a SA国际传谋 series

The county鈥檚 medical examiner鈥檚 office reported 85 killings in 2016. That spiked to 106 in 2018, up to a high of 113 in 2021.

By 2025, however, the number of homicides dropped precipitously 鈥 to 67, the medical examiner reported. Community engagement programs, like Aiken's, have been credited with

On the humid Saturday afternoon, rally attendees heard from the mother of a Riviera Beach murder , 鈥淗ope Dealer鈥 program graduates, and teenage participants for a youth-led discussion with mental health professionals.

Jeri Stanley's son, Christopher Coleman, Jr., died a day after he was shot in Riviera Beach on Jan. 2. She told the crowd how the pain never goes away.

"鈥奣he truth is, after the death of a child, there is no complete peace. A piece of the puzzle is forever missing," she said.

His killing remains unsolved by the Riviera Beach Police Department.

"鈥奣he killer is still out there, and this too consumes me every day," she said. Members of the crowd embraced her after she finished speaking.

'Speak my mind'

The rally also focused on the graduates of the "Hope Dealer" mentorship program.

Javen Bennett, 22, said, as a result of its influence, his perspective has shifted.

Growing up, 鈥溾妛e either think hoop, football, or rap. If that doesn't work, the streets,鈥 he said.

Young people waiting for Inner City Innovators "Rally for Peace" to begin on June 6, at the Coleman Park gymnasium in West Palm Beach.
Jake Shore/WLRN News
Young people waiting for Inner City Innovators "Rally for Peace" to begin on June 6, at the Coleman Park gymnasium in West Palm Beach.

鈥淎 lot of the things that we're around and we view are nothing but negative, and we happen to get drawn into it,鈥 Bennett continued, 鈥淲hich causes us to make a lot of mistakes that could follow us until we're 50.鈥

The mentors taught him it was OK to make mistakes and to learn from them, he said.

Richard Perry, 25 and another 鈥淗ope Dealer鈥 graduate, said sitting down with other men, who understood his background and experiences, helped him open up and make better choices.

鈥溾奣he tongue is very powerful,鈥 he said, 鈥溾奍 could speak up and speak my mind and not have to feel no way about anything or any burdens on my back.鈥

Different answers to the same question

West Palm Beach provides a window into two differing responses to gun violence, over the same time period.

Responding to a spike in murders in 2019, newly-elected Mayor Keith James hired former Chief Frank Adderley to take over the city police department and gave him a mandate to reduce murders. Adderley then created the agency鈥檚 so-called 鈥淕HOST鈥 unit, which concentrated police attention and arrests in the violent Tamarind corridor.

In the ensuing years, the unit wreaked havoc on the community, leading deadly chases into other cities and effecting violent arrests in West Palm, SA国际传谋 revealed in a months-long investigation.

Seven officers were ultimately indicted for their role in a fatal chase and coverup in 2024, and have pleaded not guilty.

Adderley disbanded the unit and was later fired for unrelated, financial misconduct reasons, the mayor said.

David "Dee" Rae (right) speaks with a rally attendee on June 6, 2026 at Coleman Park's gymnasium. Rae helps mentor young men in violent neighborhoods to help them make better choices.
Jake Shore/WLRN News
David "Dee" Rae (right) speaks with a rally attendee on June 6, 2026 at Coleman Park's gymnasium. Rae helps mentor young men in violent neighborhoods to help them make better choices.

Aiken and Inner City Innovators took a different tack to curb murders.

Groups like Aiken鈥檚 practice ."

CVI employs what are known as credible messengers 鈥 individuals who can speak to the realities of crime-ridden neighborhoods and support the young people experiencing and perpetrating violence.

"鈥奧e kick them out into the world and we expect them to compete. You can't compete when there's gunshots going off in your community, and that's the norm," Aiken said at the rally.

"鈥奧e realize that they're gonna need the support to get to a place when they can simply exist as young people," he said.

Since starting out, the group has expanded into Riviera Beach.

Aiken said he has hopes to bring the program countywide.

Jake Shore is an investigative reporter for SA国际传谋 covering Broward and Palm Beach counties.
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