logo
New York man fatally shot while in Puerto Rico for Bad Bunny concert remembered as inspiration

New York man fatally shot while in Puerto Rico for Bad Bunny concert remembered as inspiration

NBC News2 days ago
A New York man who was fatally shot in Puerto Rico's La Perla neighborhood in San Juan on Sunday is being remembered by his loved ones as a beloved son, friend and inspiration to all who knew him.
Kevin Mares, 25, was visiting the island with friends to attend a Bad Bunny concert. On Sunday, Mares was out when a few people began to fight across the street, his father, Hector Mares, told NBC New York.
"Somebody got a gun and start shooting, and unfortunately they hit my son in the abdomen," Hector Mares said.
Mares was an innocent bystander caught in the crossfire of the shooting, according to Homicide detective Sgt. Arnaldo Ruiz. He was taken to a hospital where he was pronounced dead.
Mares' death has left his family completely devastated and in shock.
"My son, everybody loves him, everybody," Hector Mares told NBC New York. "He was doing good at school, he was working. When he came home from work, he started taking care of his, his pets, and he loves cooking."
The last time he saw his son was right before he left for Puerto Rico.
"We say, 'Goodbye, take care, see you soon, we're gonna miss you,'" Hector Mares said. "We never, never expect that was going to be the last time we see him."
Mares' mother, Sandra Mares, was in disbelief when she was told of her son's passing.
"We couldn't believe it," she told NBC New York in Spanish. "We thought it was a joke."
Sandra recalled spending weekends with her son, when the family would get together to grill hamburgers and hotdogs, or sing karaoke.
Now, all Mares' parents want is for their son's body to be brought back to New York. They started a GoFundMe to help them with body transfer and funerary expenses.
The family remembered Mares as "a deeply loved son, devoted friend, and a source of inspiration to everyone who knew him," who had a bright future ahead of him.
"His wholehearted kindness, adventurous spirit, and unwavering commitment to family made him a pillar of strength for his loved ones," his family said on the GoFundMe page.
Mares was planning to propose to his girlfriend of six years this fall, according to his family.
"Family was at the center of everything he did, and his sudden passing has left an unfillable void in our lives," the family said.
The investigation into the shooting that killed Mares is ongoing.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

She was killed while walking to her car, family says. Man, arrested weeks later, is free on bail
She was killed while walking to her car, family says. Man, arrested weeks later, is free on bail

Los Angeles Times

time10 hours ago

  • Los Angeles Times

She was killed while walking to her car, family says. Man, arrested weeks later, is free on bail

A suspect arrested in the fatal hit-and-run killing of a woman in Hollywood in late June had his arraignment pushed back months Tuesday morning and is free on bail. Davontay Robins, 30, was in Los Angeles Superior Court for his arraignment following his July 22 arrest. Erika 'Tilly' Edwards was killed around 9 p.m. June 29; she had just finished performing at a nearby fundraiser, her husband wrote on Instagram. Kris Edwards was mourning the loss of his wife after they 'just bought a house ... to grow our family. We wanted to have kids and we were taking the next step to make a home. And now that's all gone.' Kris' sister Andrea Edwards wrote on a GoFundMe that Edwards was walking back to her parked car when she was struck by a black Mercedes G-Wagon. Robins was charged with felony vehicular manslaughter, felony hit-and-run driving resulting in death, and misdemeanor driving with a suspended license due to a previous DUI, in the death of the 37-year-old Hollywood resident. Robins posted bail, listed at $50,000. His arraignment was continued to Oct. 16, according to the L.A. County district attorney's office. Kris Edwards told CBS News outside court on Tuesday, flanked by family and friends, that he was 'surprised that he was out on bail and that his bail was set so low.' 'It cost me more to bury her than it did for him to get out,' he said. 'Explain that to me. Robins was arrested in Hollywood, only a couple of miles from the scene of the incident. He is charged with striking and killing Edwards near the intersection of West Sunset Boulevard between North Gardner Street and North Sierra Bonita Avenue in Hollywood. He fled the scene and was arrested nearly a month later as police detectives reviewed security footage to identify the driver. Los Angeles police believe speed may have been a factor in the slaying. They impounded Robins' G-Wagon, which according to CBS was found in a body shop with some damaged parts already swapped out.

27-year-old U.S. hiker found dead in Spain nearly month after going missing: Authorities
27-year-old U.S. hiker found dead in Spain nearly month after going missing: Authorities

USA Today

time11 hours ago

  • USA Today

27-year-old U.S. hiker found dead in Spain nearly month after going missing: Authorities

Authorities have reportedly found the body of an American hiker who'd been missing in the mountains along the Spain-France border since July 14. Guilford Cole Henderson, 27, appeared to have fallen about 650 feet down a mountain in Spain's remote Ordesa y Monte Pardido National Park in the Pyrenees mountains, according to both digital newspaper El Español and the newspaper El Diario De Huesca. Authorities are transporting the recovered body to a forensic medicine institute to "confirm his identity," El Español reported. The search for the Rhodes College alumnus has drawn international media attention since his friends posted pleas for help on social media in finding him. Several of his friends had hiked with him in Spain's remote Ordesa y Monte Perdido National Park. According to friends on Facebook, Henderson decided to hike alone after putting his cell phone on airplane mode to save battery power. The friends said they became concerned when Henderson didn't show for a June 14 flight from Spain to Amsterdam, where Henderson was living. Parents informed about body discovery Spanish authorities have told Henderson's parents, Trevania and John Henderson, that they believe they've recovered their son's body, according to loved ones in Nashville who spoke to The Tennessean, part of the USA TODAY Network. Henderson's parents, who now live in New England, traveled to Spain for at least a week to help with daily search efforts. His mother, who grew up in Nashville, still has connections to the area and visits Tennessee often, loved ones said. The US Embassy in Spain and the Spanish Civil Guard both declined to comment in an email to The Tennessean, requesting further information. Who was Cole Henderson? Henderson was a 27-year-old who attended high school in Delaware and graduated from Rhodes College in Memphis in 2020 with honors with a degree in computer science. He is the grandson of the late Guilford Dudley Jr., who founded Nashville's annual white-tie gala, known as the Swan Ball, and the former US Ambassador to Denmark under the Nixon administration, according to The Tennessean. His former employers include software companies in Wellesley, Massachusetts, and San Francisco, as shown on his social media profiles. According to his LinkedIn profile, he was living in Amsterdam while working as an engineer for the software company Dexter Energy. A self-described avid packer, social media posts show that he has traveled across the world, from skiing in Breckenridge, Colorado, to hiking in South Dakota's Badlands National Park, and from volunteering in Costa Rica to trekking along the famed Tour du Mont Blanc through Switzerland, Italy and France. "Cole is an experienced traveler, a kind and curious soul, and someone who means the world to me," friend Eric Simon said in a July 15 Facebook post asking for help finding Henderson. Where was Cole Henderson hiking? Henderson was set to hike through the Ordesa Valley in the Pyrenees Mountains to a mountain hut known as Refugio de Pineta. He parked his car in the Spanish village of Torla and his friends believed he was going to catch a ride back to his vehicle. Friends also said he planned on camping while in the Ordesa y Monte Perdido National Park, located in the mountains on the border between northern Spain and France. Officials do not know how long Henderson planned on hiking or whether he would attempt any of the peaks along the way. On July 10, hikers reported rain and severe thunder, the day after Henderson began his hike. They also mentioned that there was limited to no cell service on the route Henderson was possibly using. Contributing: Amanda Lee Myers, USA TODAY

Boston students discuss Massachusetts bill that would ban cellphones in school
Boston students discuss Massachusetts bill that would ban cellphones in school

Boston Globe

time12 hours ago

  • Boston Globe

Boston students discuss Massachusetts bill that would ban cellphones in school

Currently, Boston Public Schools' policy allows students to bring their cellphones to school as long as they are not visible during class time. Students are only allowed to use phones before or after school hours. Some schools in the district, such as Irving Middle School in Roslindale, Advertisement A Yondr pouch is a small bag that can only be unlocked using a special magnet that would be controlled by a school official. At least four BPS high schools, including English High School, started using Yondr pouches to restrict phone usage last year. Advertisement Ladan Mohamed, 15, a rising sophomore at Boston Latin School and a member of the Boston Student Advisory Council, opposes BPS spending money on Yondr pouches. Boston Latin School hasn't implemented them yet and has an honor system where students are not required to turn in their phones, but many classrooms have organizers where students can store their phones, so they don't get distracted during class. Mohamed also said the district needs to get better at contacting parents during emergencies, before enacting a cellphone ban. 'Let's say somebody ... breaks into the building, students and parents don't find out until after the fact,' Mohamed said, 'If students don't have their phones, the city and BPS need an emergency contact system. Right now, students are using social media as a positive tool.' Caitlin Murphy, head of school for The English High School, said that using Yondr pouches has been successful in encouraging healthy social interaction during lunch and made it easier for administrators to provide students with mental health support, since they aren't worried about student interactions on social media during the school day. 'The support team was constantly running to put out fires that were being started by social media that were causing incidents during the school day instead of actually doing responsive work. We're able to sort of proactively plan stress and anxiety groups,' Murphy said. Advertisement Murphy also said that The English High School was focused on helping students reach out to their parents if needed. 'I've been very clear with our main office staff and with anyone who ... has a phone in their office, that if a caregiver calls, then we drop what we're doing and we're getting to that student,' Murphy said. Laura Lara Santos, 16, a student at Fenway High School, where Yondr pouches have been implemented, is supportive of a 'bell-to-bell' policy where cellphones are banned throughout the school day, based on her own positive experiences in a phone-free school. 'It was reflected in my grades. The teachers actually told me that they saw a big change,' Lara Santos said in Spanish through an interpreter, 'and it helped during lunchtime too because we had real connections. We were not just talking about what had happened on TikTok.' Lara Santos is a member of Sociedad Latina, a Roxbury nonprofit that supports Latino youth with education, workforce development and other after-school programming. Alexandra Oliver-Dávila, executive director of the nonprofit, who spoke with her at the hearing, advocated for implementing a uniform bell-to-bell cellphone restriction policy across BPS at the hearing, to make education equitable for all students, irrespective of zip code. 'What I could foresee happening is there's going to be certain schools that are thought of as needing discipline that need to use the Yondr pouch,' Oliver-Dávila said, 'And we're going to come back down to the divide of the exam schools versus open enrollment schools.' Most of the students at the hearing testified against cellphone restrictions, saying that a ban would not help teenagers develop self-control when it comes to technology. Munira Saeed, 15, a student at the Boston Latin Academy, said that a cellphone ban would merely delay the challenge of teenagers learning how to use cellphones in a healthy manner, rather than solving the issue. Advertisement 'Trust and responsibility goes both ways. Give us the structure, the support and the chance to show that we can use our tools responsibly,' Saeed said. David Bickham, research director at the Digital Wellness Lab at Boston Children's Hospital, said that based on a 'If the school clearly communicates the goals of the policy to the students, it doesn't matter how strict it is, the kids [in the survey] said that this policy increased their sense of independence ... so the details of the policy were less important,' he said. Angela Mathew can be reached at

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store