<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9202180028
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
921224
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Thursday, December 24, 1992
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1B
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo Color JOHN LUKE;Photo Color DAYMON J. HARTLEY
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>


:
Shot last summer  playing basketball, Damon Bailes now needs a
helping hand from his mother, Velma, before his morning
exercises.
Damon Bailes, 21, was shot at old Bentley High in Livonia. The
court is now closed.
Damon  Bailes receives a steadying influence from his brother
Jerome as he moves about the family home on Detroit's west
side.
</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
SEE ALSO METRO EDITION PAGE 1B
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1992, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
A TRAGEDY TOO EASY TO IGNORE
EVERYONE LOSES BECAUSE THE BULLETS KEEP FLYING
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
The instructions are taped to the wall above his bed. They show diagrams
of hands and feet, with arrows pointing left and right. His mother pulls on
his limp right arm, forward and backward, forward  and backward, as if rowing
a boat.

  "He couldn't move nothing at first," she says. "Now he can do some on his
own. Show him, Damon."

  The young man in the blue pajamas turns his head and squints.  He is nearly
blind now. The room is dark, the air stale, the one window closed. The rails
along his single bed keep him from falling out. On the wall above him are
small cut- out magazine photos of basketball  players, including Steve Smith,
his favorite. Once, he took a green T-shirt and drew Smith's number on it with
a pen and wore that shirt to the courts. This was back when he could still see
the ball  and a small ray of hope inside it.
  Now he looks at his arm and concentrates. It does nothing at first. Then,
finally, it jerks in the air as if yanked by a puppeteer's string. It stays up
for one  second, two seconds, Damon Bailes, the most tragic currency in the
city of Detroit, a young black male with a bullet hole in his head, smiles
briefly, then lets go.
  His arm drops, dead as air.
Smooth,  so smooth
  "We got next!"
  It was a warm May night and the basketball game was moving up and down the
asphalt.
  "We got next!" The kids were sweating as they waited. They dribbled in
place. Damon, whose nickname was "Smooth," looked around. He had never been to
this court before, outside old Bentley High in Livonia. He and four friends,
Lawrence Poole, Torrin Cottrell, Kevin Franklin and  Terrill Malone, had
started the afternoon in the city, but they lost their first game, and the
line was too long to wait for another. There are not enough playable courts in
Detroit. And far too many  kids with time on their hands.
  Poole said he knew a place in the suburbs where the competition was pretty
good. So they got in the car and drove to Livonia. Five black kids in a Ford
Escort. They  were not there long before a police car stopped them. 
  "Your plates are expired," the officer said. When he ran their names
through the computer, one of them, Kevin Franklin, was shown as delinquent  on
child support payments. He was arrested and taken to jail. 
  "Let's just go home," Torrin said.
  They almost did. But Damon wanted to play ball, and Poole did, too. So now
they stood under the  floodlights at Bentley, four city kids, waiting for the
suburban rims.
  "Check the guy in the red shorts," Poole said to Damon as they watched the
game.
  "Uh-huh."
  "There go the shorts we want,  the long kind."
  "Yeah, they nice. We should buy some of those."
  That was it, they claim. Nothing more. The guy in the red shorts, Tyrone
Swint, also from Detroit, might have seen them looking  and pointing. He would
later tell police he thought Damon was "a guy who jumped me" at a Detroit
nightclub. Whatever. Something set him off.
  And he had a gun.
  "Bring the car around," he told  a friend.
  "What for?"
  "We might have a fight."
  The suburbs were about to meet the city.
The final game
  "OK, let's play," Torrin said, and he bounced an inbounds pass. They ran up
and  down the court several times. Damon, a 6-foot-2, baby-faced guard who had
dropped out of high school but starred in church leagues and was hoping to get
to a small college if he could pass his equivalency  exams, tossed in a couple
baskets. Now he dribbled the ball upcourt. He loved this part of the game,
when everything was open, everyone was moving, and he was in control. He felt
special. Maybe this  was the only place he ever felt special.
  He was about to make a pass to his best friend, Poole. Suddenly, witnesses
say, Tyrone Swint, guy in the red shorts, came up behind Damon and pulled out
a  gun. He shot Damon in the back of the head. This was before anyone had the
chance to yell, "Look out!" This was while Damon was dribbling a basketball.
The bullet went through Damon's brain and lodged between the skull and the
skin. He went down. The ball rolled away.
  "Everyone started running," Cottrell says. "I saw the guy shoot Damon and
then he shot again at someone else. As I was running,  I saw him go jumping
into the window of this black car and they drove away."
  The black car was the escape horse, and Tyrone and his buddy were cowboys
heading out of town. They drove down Five Mile Road and turned onto
Middlebelt. Tyrone threw his gun out the window. It landed in the dirt. Later,
Tyrone jumped out of the car and ran through the streets alone.
  Back on the court, under the suburban  floodlights, Damon Bailes was lying
in blood. One of the players was trying to take his pulse. Poole was yelling
at the oncoming EMS workers: "My boy's lying here shot! He's shot!"
  Torrin was crying.  He had known Damon since they were kids. They played in
church leagues together. The summer before they had gone to Saginaw for an
all-day tournament, and they won the whole thing and everyone got trophies.
On the bus ride home, Damon was laughing and talking about how good they were.
He had scored all these points. They waved their trophies at each other.
  Now Damon was flat, not moving, his head was  swollen and bloody, and there
was a big knot on the forehead where he had hit the pavement. Torrin and Poole
couldn't stop crying. They were still kids, really. They had never been in
trouble like this.  They ran to the school and found a pay phone. They called
Damon's aunt.
  "Damon been shot!" Poole said. "Damon been shot!"
Poor and blind
  Inside the quiet A-frame house on Greenlawn in Detroit there is a small,
white, plastic Christmas tree. Velma Bailes, Damon's mother, a woman who looks
too young for nine children, no husband, and an ominous pile of hospital
bills, bought the tree last year,  at Shoppers World, for $25.99. She walks
around its needles, and says Damon wants a small TV for Christmas, so he can
watch programs from his bed.
  "Will he get what he wants?" 
  "He'll get what  he needs."
  "What does he need?
  "He needs boots for the snow."
  It has been seven months since the bullet, which was taken from Damon's
brain and given to the police. Damon was in a coma for  the first five weeks.
Velma would try to talk to him in the hospital, as the doctors had suggested.
  "Damon, we need you to come back," she would say. She would hold his hand
and look at the tubes  in his throat, nose and arms. She would go home.
  One night, a nurse called and said to come down quickly. The patient next
to Damon was saying,  "Damon can't see."
  "How do you know?"
  "He  woke up yellin', 'I can't see! I can't see!' "
  The bullet had hit the lobe that controls vision. It also had left Damon
paralyzed on the right side. In the months that followed, he would regain a
slurred speech, partial vision and some feeling in his otherwise dead right
leg and arm. The vision bothered him most. He would cry for hours over his
near- blindness.
  "He was always saying, 'How can  I play basketball if I can't see?' "
recalls Mary Roy, who manages the brain-injury program at the Rehabilitation
Institute of Michigan. "We tried to tell him, 'Damon, there are other things
you can  do that are more important than basketball.' "
  This, of course, is wishful thinking. The truth is, for a kid like Damon,
there was only basketball. He was never college material. He couldn't get
through two different high schools. He never held a job. He lived at home, he
had a baby with his girlfriend. Maybe he foolishly figured that little leather
ball would someday lift him up above all this,  the welfare checks, the food
stamps, the porch that is falling apart.
  If he was stupid, so be it. He is not the first. But he did no wrong. He
committed no crimes. The tendency in well-to-do circles  is to dismiss a kid
such as Damon as hopeless, destined to a bad finish, as if this were some kind
birthright as an urban baby. But if we think like that, we cut the veins out
of our city, and, don't  kid yourself, our suburbs, too. Young black males.
Wounded by gunshot. Young black males. Killed by gunshot. This is all our
story. This is where we live. Detroit. A place where, this year alone, 266
children under the age of 17 have been shot.
  We are dying, one bullet at a time.
  "I don't know what parents are thinking when they let kids have them,
guns," Velma Bailes sighs. "If one of my  children had a gun in the house,
they got to go. I don't care. All they ever do is get you killed."
  Damon, lying in bed, is looking at the ceiling. He is asked whether he ever
fired a gun. He snorts  a breath and closes his eyes.
  "Nuh-uh," he whispers.
No easy solutions
  It didn't take police long to find Tyrone Swint. They found the gun. They
found the car. He still was wearing the red shorts  when they pulled up
several hours later in Detroit. Swint admitted to the shooting. He claimed
self-defense, although how you do that and shoot someone in the back of the
head is still a mystery. Why  did he do it? Did he even know Damon? Is it
true, as Damon's friends claim, that the two had never met? The trial, already
postponed once, is now scheduled for February.
  Meanwhile, the basketball  courts at Bentley have been closed since that
night. The gates are padlocked, the rims removed. Signs reading "NO
TRESPASSING" are posted. This is a quick suburban reaction: you have trouble,
cut off  its food supply. 
  "It's a real shame," says Sgt. Lawrence Little, who works in Livonia and
made the arrest. "They had a nice setup at that school, nice courts and all.
But you can't have bullets  flying near a subdivision.
  "We asked those kids why they came up from Detroit to play basketball? You
know what they said? They said, 'You can't play down in Detroit. You get
shot.' "
  Damon  Bailes is still waiting for Medicaid to approve his much-needed
physical therapy. It could take weeks, even months, the rehab center says.
Meanwhile, he sits in bed, and his mother and brothers must  bathe him,
exercise him, walk him down the hallway, and help him to the bathroom. He is
21 years old.
  Tyrone Swint, who is 20, sits in the Wayne County jail. When a verification
call is made, a worker  there is intrigued.
  "Swint? What'd he do?"
  "He shot someone on a basketball court."
  "Yeah? He shoot one of the Pistons?"
  "No, nobody famous."
  "Oh. Well. Yep, he's in here."
  "Thank  you."
  "Merry Christmas."
A difficult lesson
  "What can you remember?" Damon is asked.
  He looks at his arm. He speaks in a whisper. "Can't . . . remember
nothing."
  "What do you see when  you close your eyes?"
  He closes his eyes. He tries. 
  "Don't . . . see . . . nothin'."
  "What do you see when you dream?" 
  He sniffs. He slowly smiles.
  "I see . . . me . . . playing  ball . . ."
  Damon Bailes can be easily ignored. He can be ignored in a backlog of
police reports. He can be ignored in a backlog of Medicaid requests. He can be
ignored because he lives in the lowest  strata of our city, and, at times, he
might as well live in a cave. 
  But he counts. He may not be William Kennedy Smith, but he counts. On the
wall of his tiny bedroom is a note from Poole: "Damon,  you are a precious
part of my life and I won't ever forget you." Underneath the word "precious"
Poole wrote, in parentheses, "Don't think I'm gay."
  He counts. And we cannot solve his problem with  a padlock and a sign. We
are linked to the city, whether we work there, live there, or even go in for a
meal. There is no moat around Eight Mile Road. Their problems are our
problems. They bleed, we  all bleed.
  "All we were doing was playing basketball," says Torrin Cottrell, almost
pleading. "You don't expect someone to run up and shoot you. It's like, if
basketball is doing something wrong,  then what are we supposed to do?"
  What are we supposed to do? The future of our city is being taken down,
gangland style, one ambulance after another. We have to do something. Tonight
is Christmas  Eve, they are talking flurries, and that should make our suburbs
pretty and white. But try to remember, while you open your presents, that
somewhere, not far away, Damon Bailes is struggling to see the drawings on the
wall, the ones teaching him how to walk again. For what, you keep asking
yourself? For what? For what? For what? 
  For nothing.
  And the snow falls.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
SHOOTING; BASKETBALL; DAMON BAILES; TYRONE SWINT; DETROIT; VIOLENCE
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
