6 December 2019,
 Off

Upon a South Carolina summer night, Ja’Naiya Scott sat on her family sofa, joined with her older sister and sister.
She was awaiting her time in Robert Anderson Middle School — combined with the rest of her lifetime and had moved on from Whitehall Elementary.
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Over 35 shots interrupted hospitalizing cousin and her sister and injuring and ending the life of 11-year-old Ja’Naiya.
The tragedy, which happened about 1:30 a.m. Sunday from the town of Anderson, hit home with Buffalo Bills defensive end Shaq Lawson in more ways than you.
“It could have been my little sister,” Lawson said Wednesday through The Greenville News. “I have a little sister around that age, and it might have been one of my family .”
In the wake of the murder of Ja’Naiya, Lawson has pledged to cover the funeral.
A three-season veteran with the Bills, Lawson grew up in South Carolina, attending D.W. Daniel High before playing at Clemson.
Lawson reached out to speak with Marshella Rice, the mother of Ja’Naiya.
“I know that her heart was hurting,” Lawson explained. “I was speechless I could not saying anything. I felt for her pain. I felt the pain, too. I felt just like any way I could help out, I had been planning to do that. It hit my heart.”
Struck by a bullet in her right shoulder, the subclavian artery of Ja’Naiya was severed and she died in the emergency room.
The shots were ignored by an unknown assailant with no suspects having been called and no charges are filed.
“Whoever did this must come forward and tell the truth,” Lawson said. “And whoever’s hiding, it’s wrong that you’re hiding. This is. It is just pointless killing people — murdering an innocent kid. She was home, a place she was supposed to be safe.”
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