
Mother loses 3 sons to gun violence. Most recently in Indy's downtown mass shooting
Family and Indianapolis police started calling about 1:44 a.m. July 5 because they needed to deliver heartbreaking news: her 16-year-old son was gone.
Xavion Jackson, the youngest of six, was one of two teens killed during a mass shooting in downtown Indianapolis. Five more people between the ages of 16 and 21 were also injured.
'He said, 'I'm coming home after the Fourth, mama, I promise,'' Xiyya Jackson told IndyStar. 'This is my baby boy, and this is my third kid who has died of gun violence. It's not fair.'
The 42-year-old mother of four boys and twin girls lost another son to homicide when he was shot in January 2024 at Stanley Strader Park. His case remains unsolved. Her oldest son was shot and killed in 2021 outside a Waffle House on Pendleton Pike. An arrest was made.
Xavion Jackson was pronounced dead at the scene of the mass shooting that has caused city-wide outrage The problem of youth with guns downtown has circulated between City-County Council, Mayor Joe Hogsett, Prosecutor Ryan Mears, law enforcement, and community leaders since the shooting.
Parents and guardians have been asked to step up and get better control of their kids, but for Jackson and her family, the noise of now comes a little too late, especially when there's been a family history of violence that has plagued them for generations.
A 1992 Indianapolis Recorder news headline reads, 'ex-boyfriend confesses to pre-Thanksgiving killing.' A man told police he became upset while he and Rosa Pearl Jackson, 42, were walking along the edge of a river because she no longer wanted to be with him.
He confessed to choking and leaving her to drown. Her body was found in 1993.
That was Xiyya Jackson's mother. She was 10 years old at the time.
Years later, that type of fatal generational trauma would plague her again when she got into a decade-long relationship with a man who would father some of her children.
'I killed their dad,' Jackson told IndyStar. 'I was a victim of domestic violence. I was defending myself from their father and murdered him.'
Jackson shot Vincent Lanking Sr. at a Budget 8 Inn motel in March of 2017.
She would sit in jail for a year and a half until being found not guilty of voluntary manslaughter and aggravated battery in 2018. She wrote a book about the ordeal called No Vacancy: My Story of Domestic Violence, Murder, and the Children Caught in the Crossfire.
'The day after I was released from jail, my sister was stabbed over 50 times,' Jackson said.
On Aug. 19, 2018, Vickie Jackson, 45, was stabbed with a broken wine bottle by another woman during a fight, according to court documents. Surveillance footage captured the killing in an apartment hallway on the north side.
Her oldest son, Robert Howard Jr., 22, was shot and killed in 2021 following a dispute in the Waffle House parking lot on Pendleton Pike.
After he died, she moved to Tennessee and hoped the change would be better for her remaining children.
'But my boys kept running back to Indianapolis,' Jackson said. 'They said Tennessee was lame, and they wanted to be with their friends, plus we still had family in Indy. There were times when they'd just up and leave, and I had no idea where they were.'
Police reports reveal Jackson made numerous runaway reports from 2019 to 2023. When the kids were found, police would bring them back across state lines to their mother.
Her other son, Rondre Jackson, 19, was shot and killed in a neighborhood near Keystone Avenue and Stanley Strader Park in 2024. Xiyya Jackson believes one of his friends set him up, but police have released few details and no arrests have been announced.
'I'm just here. I'm trying to get some strength,' Jackson said. 'I feel empty. I just don't understand why this keeps happening to me. I wasn't hard enough on them.'
Brother and son, Robert Howard Jr.: Man dead in shooting following 'disturbance' at Lawrence Waffle House parking lot
Aunt and sister, Vicki Jackson: Woman arrested in fatal stabbing on north side of Indianapolis, IMPD says
Her remaining son, the namesake of the man she killed eight years ago, was with his brother downtown. The 17-year-old was arrested along with three other teens and charged with dangerous possession of a firearm, resisting law enforcement, and obstruction of justice.
Vincent Lanking Jr. was waived to adult court on July 8.
'We don't even know what happened. I've heard so many stories, and it was just a big mess downtown. We have to see and review the cameras,' Jackson said.
She'd let them visit Indianapolis to be with her goddaughter and enjoy the holiday.
'One story I heard is that Xavion was hit by a stray bullet,' Jackson said.
A probable cause affidavit for Lanking's arrest reveals that 20 minutes before the mass shooting on July 5, Indianapolis police officer Christopher Kaleel noticed the teen in all black clothing, with black gloves, and stopped him for looking suspicious.
Lanking started running, and while pursuing, Kaleel watched him pull out a tan Glock 19X from around his waist. The officer thought the teen was drawing the handgun to use against police and ordered him to drop it while pointing his department-issued firearm during the chase.
Lanking threw the gun into the air, tossing it aside, and Kaleel took him to the ground to place him into custody. Kaleel said he called the teen's mother, but said she was uncooperative and did not provide any additional necessary information.
'There's no point in going to get him now, so we're leaving him in there,' Jackson told IndyStar of her jailed son before he was waived to adult court.
Jackson acknowledges that her boys have been affected by a lot of the choices she made. She knows that their father's death and her incarceration caused trauma. While others ponder the issue of kids roaming the streets with guns, she is getting ready to bury another son while facing criticism for the decisions they made and the outcome it's caused.
Beyond the reality of his death, Jackson said her youngest son was a happy kid who loved music.
'Sometimes I'm shaking, and then the emotions come up, but then I'm just empty,' Jackson.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Friends of Idaho Murder Victims Explain Why They Waited Hours to Call 911 in New Documentary
Friends of the two roommates who were home at the time four University of Idaho students were stabbed to death in their off-campus home in 2022 explained why the surviving roommates didn't immediately call 911 in a new documentary. "One Night in Idaho," a Prime Video docuseries which premiered on July 11, features interviews with family members and friends of the four victims: Kaylee Goncalves, Madison Mogen, Xana Kernodle and Ethan Chapin. Hunter Johnson, Emily Alandt and Josie Lauteren, three friends of the victims, shared how they were called to the house hours after the murders by Dylan Mortensen and Bethany Funke, who lived at the residence and were home at the time of the slayings. Officials have said the murders took place between 4 a.m. and 4:20 a.m. on Nov. 13, 2022, and a 911 call came in around 11:58 a.m. that morning. 'I think it's very important for everybody to know that 'What if?' doesn't matter, because if they had known what was going on it would have been too late anyways,' Alandt said, speaking about Mortensen and Funke in the documentary. Johnson, Alandt's boyfriend, said that when he woke up in the morning on Nov. 13, 2022, "It started off like any normal day." He explained he had slept over at Alandt's apartment, which was down the road from the home where Mogen, Goncalves, Kernodle and Chapin were found dead. Alandt explained that Mortensen, one of the surviving roommates, had called her, asking them to come over. "She was like, 'Something weird happened last night. I don't really know if I was dreaming or not, but I'm really scared. Can you come check out the house?'" Alandt said. Mortensen told her that she was in the basement with her other roommate Bethany Funke, and that they had called Kernodle a few times, but she wasn't answering. "I was like, 'Ha, ha, sure. Should I bring my pepper spray?' Not thinking anything of it," Alandt said. Alandt's roommate Lauteren said Mortensen had called them to come over before after she had heard weird noises. "She's called us before and been like, 'Oh, I'm scared. Can you bring your boyfriends over?' But it was never anything serious, it was just like, a pan fell — like, actually nothing," Lauteren said. "Because it's Moscow." Alandt said she didn't think the request was urgent, so they started walking to the house. "When we got there, Dylan and Bethany had exited the house. They looked frightened just kind of like, hands on their mouth, like, I don't know what's going on, type (of) thing," Alandt said. "When I was going up the stairs, Hunter Johnson was already in the house. We were just a bit behind." "As soon as I stepped in the house, I was like, 'Oh, something is so not right.' Like, you could feel it almost," Lauteren said. Once Lauteren entered the home, she was quickly pushed out, and Johnson told them to call 911 after he saw what was upstairs. "Hunter had enough courage to tell them to call the police for not a real reason," Alandt explained. "He worded it very nicely. He said, 'Tell him there's an unconscious person.' Hunter saved all of us extreme trauma by not letting us know anything." Mortensen was the one who called 911, Lauteren said. "I had to take the phone from her because she was so completely hysterical," Lauteren said. "They're like 'What's the address, what's the address, what's the address?' and I was like, '1122 King Road.'' "I think that's when Hunter looked at me, and he was shaking his head," Lauteren added. "He was like, 'They didn't have a pulse.' And I mean, even when he said they had no pulse, I still was like, 'Oh, the paramedics are gonna come and revive them." Mortensen and Funke did not participate in the documentary, and did not immediately respond to a request for comment from NBC News. Mortensen told investigators she woke up around 4 a.m. when she heard noise from upstairs, according to a probable cause affidavit released in 2023. She later opened her bedroom door and saw a man with bushy eyebrows walking toward a sliding glass door in the home, and locked herself in her room after seeing the man, according to the affidavit. Text messages and phone call records between the roommates on the night of the murders were released in court documents earlier this year, and showed Mortensen later went to Funke's room in the basement of the home around 4:20 a.m. The three friends in the docuseries cited shock and trauma response as reasons why it took hours for the call to be placed. 'It wasn't until the morning that (Mortensen) realized, holy s---, that couldn't have been a dream,' Alandt said. 'And that's when I got my phone call from her, they hadn't even gone upstairs or anything, she just called and said, 'Something weird happened, I thought it was a dream, I'm not quite sure anymore. I tried to call everybody to wake them up and no one's answering.' And I was like, 'OK, I'll come over.'' The 911 call came in around 11:58 a.m., police have said. 'Something happened in our house. We don't know what,' the 911 caller said, according to a transcript of the call. Bryan Kohberger was arrested about six weeks after the killings and was later charged with the murder of Goncalves, Mogen, Kernodle and Chapin. Kohberger pleaded guilty to four counts of murder and one count of felony burglary on July 2, and he is scheduled to be sentenced on July 23, where he faces up to life in prison. This article was originally published on
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Toronto cops probing murder after body dumped along 401 in Pickering
Homicide detectives are investigating a gruesome murder after human remains were found dumped along the side of Hwy. 401 in Pickering early Friday. Toronto Police have confirmed their officers are investigating the murder after a body was found along the south side of the busy highway's eastbound lanes just west of Whites Rd. – in Durham Region, just outside of their jurisdiction – shortly after midnight. No further details have been officially released so far. However, Toronto Sun sources say the remains were discovered in a suitcase and are believed to be that of a missing Scarborough woman. Toronto cops spent Friday morning searching an area along the side of Hwy. 401, using MTO trucks to help block the highway while Forensic Unit and Marine Unit officers could scour a watery marshy gully using metal detectors and long poles. The officers recovered evidence and cleared from the area around the noon-hour. A Homicide detective showed up before noon and walked into the crime scene, which was littered with various police markers near a culvert system just off the highway. Aidan Kendic and his co-workers, who work at a nearby musical instrument and sound warehouse, wandered over to learn about the grisly find while they were on their coffee break. 'I don't know what to make of it. I just heard about it five or 10 minutes ago,' Kendic said. 'It's pretty crazy.' 'It does freak me out. I don't know why they would pick here right next to my work. I don't know what to make of it,' he added. Some of his co-workers had the same thoughts as they peered through the fences separating the overgrown marsh area, their employer's building and Hwy. 401, snapping cellphone images of the officers searching. Further down Hwy. 401 in Durham Region, sources said a dumpster was removed on a flatbed from the Pickering Casino Resort Hotel, likely taken to the Centre for Forensic Sciences. Around noontime, the CTV helicopter captured video footage of multiple Toronto Police vehicles, a Forensic Unit truck and a large group of officers searching for further evidence at a waste management transfer station in Pickering on Friday. It's believed that the various crime scenes are connected somehow yet police have yet to reveal any of their findings. While not officially confirmed by police, Sun sources say the murder is thought to be tied to an unknown trouble call that 43 Division responded to recently after neighbours reported hearing people fighting at a residence in Scarborough. Investigators 'working tirelessly' to catch 15-year-old boy's killer Toronto teen charged with murder in death of 14-year-old boy Cops identify Scarborough homicide victim According to sources, the officers were unable to locate a woman who may have been involved in the incident. Investigators later reviewed video from a security camera on the premises and spotted her entering the property but not exiting. Sources said a man was taken into custody and charged with aggravated assault related to the missing woman after officers found evidence of evidence of a suspected crime scene in a home. – With files by Jack Boland and Chris Doucette
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Woman found guilty in mushroom murder mystery that left three family members dead after meal
A woman who poisoned four family members, killing three of them, is facing life in prison after a jury found her guilty of murder-by-mushrooms. Erin Patterson invited her estranged husband's mother, father, aunt and uncle to lunch at her home in the southern state of Victoria in Australia in July 2023 and served them beef Wellington made with death cap mushrooms. Patterson, aged 50, told police she must have included the deadly fungi in her recipe by accident. But the trial proved she had lied and tried to hide evidence of her culinary crime by disposing of incriminating evidence. During the 10-week trial, which dominated headlines Down Under, the jury heard how Patterson had invited the family for lunch under the pretext of revealing a cancer diagnosis. What To Know About The Fda's Paralytic Shellfish Poisoning Warning Estranged husband Simon decided at the last minute not to attend, and Patterson was originally also accused of his attempted murder, although she never faced those charges in court. Read On The Fox News App Google searches for beef Wellington recipes have soared in Australia over the last few months, as the trial captivated the country. During Patterson's trial, the jury saw pictures of the leftover beef Wellington and heard how family members had gotten sick and gone to the local hospital, where mushroom poisoning was quickly diagnosed. They also heard from the sole survivor, her estranged husband's uncle Ian Wilkinson, who testified that Erin had served them beef Wellington with green beans and mashed potatoes in individual portions, but served herself on a different plate. No traces of the deadly mushrooms were found in her system, and she told police that she was bulimic and had vomited after eating the food. A doctor who treated the poisoning victims says he had taken one look at her and known something was wrong. In an interview with Australia's ABC News, Doctor Chris Webster said he had asked Erin Patterson where she had gotten the mushrooms. Couple Charged In Alleged Cyanide Plot To Kill Ex-girlfriends; Agents Hospitalized During Search "When she didn't respond in a way that instantly would have explained it as a tragic accident, that's it, from that moment in my mind, she was guilty," he said. "She was evil and very smart to have planned it all and carried it out, but didn't quite dot every 'i' and cross every 't.'" Although prosecutors couldn't find a specific motive for the murders, Australian media outlets have reported that Erin, who had worked as an accountant and also an air traffic controller, had resented her ex-husband, Simon, for not doing his share of household chores. In messages to online friends, the triple-murderer said she had had to hire a cleaner because of Simon's refusal to help out around the house. The couple have two children together. Prosecutors untangled her web of lies about the poisonings, including her claims that she had never been foraging for mushrooms, and that she didn't own a food dehydrator. The kitchen appliance was later found at a nearby landfill site, where Erin had taken it to try and dispose of evidence. Police found death cap mushroom residue inside. Patterson's legal team has 28 days to appeal the conviction. If there is no appeal, she will likely be sentenced in August and faces life behind article source: Woman found guilty in mushroom murder mystery that left three family members dead after meal