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Before the night of April 3, 2007, Fernando Guzman and Ramona Moreno were unfamiliar with the sound of gunfire. At first, they thought they had heard an explosion.

The young couple had spent the evening at the hospital, where Ramona's sister had given birth that day. They had left their 2-year-old daughter, Yelena, at her grandparents' house — a tidy yellow-and-green home on North 17th Street in Kansas City, Kansas. Yelena was an affectionate child who earned the nickname "La Choky" because of her tendency to hug her dad, Fernando, tightly around his neck. She met her parents at the door when they got back a little after 9:30 p.m.

Ramona, a soft-spoken 23-year-old with a porcelain face and blond-streaked hair, sat on the couch in the living room. She watched Yelena as she played on the floor in front of the entertainment center, munching on a tortilla. The protective mother asked the toddler to stop playing with a glass statue in the shape of praying hands that her grandma kept on the shelf.

Then came the noise. The frightened family heard a series of loud blasts coming from the entryway. They didn't know it was a hail of bullets from a gunman standing at their front gate.

Ramona started screaming. Fernando ran from the kitchen. Yelena crumpled to the ground.

Carlos Moreno, Ramona's brother, had been watching TV in his bedroom. The 21-year-old recognized the sound of shotgun fire. He darted out of his room. He saw his niece holding her head in the entryway. He crawled to retrieve her. Keeping low, he pulled Yelena to a back room, leaving a trail of blood smeared on the hardwood floor.

Fernando grabbed his daughter from Carlos. He didn't realize she was hurt until his right arm started to feel hot and wet. Under her long black hair, Yelena had been struck just below her left ear. The wound bled onto her father's shoulder. She was still breathing and her eyes were open, but she didn't respond when her parents spoke to her.

Ramona called 911, but she was terrified that the paramedics wouldn't come in time. She wanted to drive to the hospital herself. "But — I don't know why — I couldn't touch Yelena," she says. "I was afraid she would die in my arms."

They waited in a bedroom in the back of the house, listening for the sound of sirens. Ramona couldn't understand why her brother, Carlos, wouldn't give her a hug.

"I'm sorry," Carlos said. "It's my fault. It's my fault."

When the ambulance arrived, Fernando rushed outside with Yelena in his arms. The front porch was sprinkled with shattered glass. As he passed through the chain-link fence at the end of the yard, he didn't notice the five red-tipped shotgun shells partly hidden in the foliage near the sidewalk. Ramona jumped in the back of the ambulance and asked Yelena to stay with her.

Once the ambulance took off toward Children's Mercy Hospital, Fernando cornered his brother-in-law. He knew his in-laws didn't have problems with anybody. He knew his family had no reason to be targeted.

"Who did this, man?" Fernando asked.

"The FLs," Carlos said.

The FLs were members of a gang called Familia Loca. Carlos was part of rival gang Florencia 13. For nearly a decade, Kansas City, Kansas, police have been monitoring street robberies and drive-by shootings connected to Hispanic gangs. But in 2007, the violence between F13 and Familia Loca escalated. Their battles weren't confined to the streets but aimed at each other's homes.

And last April, an innocent 2-year-old got caught in the crossfire.

Ramona and Fernando met through one of Ramona's friends from Wyandotte High School. She had come to Kansas City in 1996, when her parents moved from Mexico to find work. Fernando arrived in the Midwest three years later, after growing up in Los Angeles.

They dated for a year before they settled down together. When their first child was born, Fernando suggested the name Yelena. He got the name from a character in the Vin Diesel movie xXx.

The small family lived in a square, white house with brown paint trimming the windows. Beyond the fence that outlined their mostly barren backyard, the headstones of the Mt. Calvary Catholic Cemetery framed a view of Interstate 635. They both worked as janitors. Ramona says they felt safe in a community surrounded by so many family members.

Yelena was an energetic child who sang and danced, even when there was no music. She watched sports with her dad but loved wearing make-up and clomping around in her mom's high heels. She craved being the center of attention; at her second birthday party, she wore a bright-pink dress to complement the Strawberry Shortcake theme.

Ramona says the family didn't have friends who were victims of violence. She had concerns about her brother, though. Carlos had a job at Epic Landscaping, but he'd had some trouble with police. In August 2006, he was charged with fleeing the scene of an accident and possession of marijuana. He pleaded guilty and was sentenced to probation.

Carlos was evasive or got angry when Ramona asked whether he was in a gang. A few months before their home was attacked, Ramona took a disposable camera to Wal-Mart to have the film developed. She thought the camera was hers, but it belonged to Carlos. The pictures showed Carlos and his friends flashing what Ramona knew were gang signs.

Write Your Comment show comments (9)
  1. Sad story. I could not come close to imagining a scenario like that with my kids.

  2. Very good story about this sad situation. My heart goes out to the family.

    The KCKPD need to recognize the hispanic gang problem in KCKS/Wyandotte County and take some further action. Seems like these shootings are becoming more and more frequent. It is just a matter of time before another innocent child is killed.

  3. im sorry.. i do not feel sorry for the family. the only one who needs our compasion was the baby.

  4. an innocent part of the family needs no sympathy? that's wrong.

    sad, but well written.

  5. It's actions like this that fuel the anti-immigration sentiment in this country. They keep this stuff up and your going to start seeing deportations on a daily basis.

  6. I can't comprehend how these gangs, white, hispanic, black or otherwise can do drive by shootings, kill innocent children and live with themselves. It has nothing to do with race these things happen everywhere in the US daily. I think this is the worst crime possible next child molesters and serial killers. They obviously have no conscience.

  7. I can remember 3 shootings in the past 8 years in KCK where a young child was killed when some thug sprayed bullets into a house or car. Too bad that illegal alien didn't flee to Honduras. They have quite the solution to these predators: kneecapping and bullets. Organized group violence that preys on society is worst than regular street violence and must be dealt with a firm choice. The street gang that calls its crazy family is just a wee bit ironic for a tough street gang who murders children.

  8. Only one word to describe these thugs, COWARDS! Shooting at a house without knowing if their enemy is home is gutless. Call you enemy out and face him like a man you punks.
    These cowards squeal like pigs when they are arrested and turn on each other to save their yellow asses. The so called leader ran off to Mexico with his yellow tail between his legs. Ooh, let's go spray some more paint, that'll show em, right "COBARDES"?

  9. It is awful what the world is coming to. This so sad, such a beautiful child was innocently murdered. The parents had to have been extremely shocked to see their little girl in this way, let alone

    not even know a family member, was part of a gang, even though he says a not an evil one. This is what happens with the splurge of retaliation. It makes no difference if the cause was from drugs, illegal ammunitions or whatever, a (supposed) good gang or bad gang. And honestly there is no such thing as a good gang. If a person is out for you it makes no difference what side you are on, because 99 chances out of 100, some innocent persons life will be taken, when it comes to rampant / drive by shootings.

    There was one person that made a comment, on the immigration factor. I totally agree with that person and the government on putting a halt to over the border interlopers. They need to be sent right back if caught crossing the border. I am not rallying on all mexicans that are here in the U.S. already, especially those that have family in the U.S. I feel that those that have families should be granted immunity. I have a lot of friends that are mexican, african american and asian. And i can say there is good and bad in all races even in the whites and i am a white.

    If the Chinese can build the Great Wall in Beiing, as well as some of the tallest building in the world all around, then we should be able to build something tall enough to keep illegals out that try to cross the border.

    My heart goes out to the parents on the loss of a beautiful child.

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