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MOUNT HOPE, Ohio, Sept. 4 — It’s an annual prank in this tranquil Amish community, where men wear straw hats and women bonnets and plain dresses: Youngsters hide in cornfields and hurl tomatoes at passing cars. This year, the mischief turned deadly. |
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The sheriff’s department did not have a suspect, only a vague description of a middle-aged male of medium height.
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A MOTORIST who had been pelted several times on Labor Day got out of his car and fired three to five rounds into the 7-foot-high corn, killing 23-year-old Steven L. Keim. No arrest has been made. Residents are reeling from shock, unable to understand why anybody would retaliate so violently. Authorities say the county hadn’t seen a firearm-related homicide in about three decades. “The prank has gone on for years and years,” said Marty Yoder, who owns Marty’s Shoes in this town about 60 miles south of Cleveland. “All over the county it’s been happening every year.” The shooting occurred just north of Mount Hope in Holmes County, where the clip-clop of horses pulling Amish buggies is just as common as the sound of passing automobiles. Holmes County has what is believed to be the world’s largest population of Amish, who do not believe in modern conveniences such as electricity and automobiles. PASSING CARS TARGETED |
Keim, 23, an Apple Creek resident of Amish heritage, died of multiple wounds to the chest, Holmes County Coroner Robert Anthony said.
Keim was with about 10 other members of the Amish community, ages 15 to 23. The group told the sheriff’s office they had been throwing tomatoes and firing paintball guns at passing vehicles.
The crime scene is marked by trampled corn stalks that interrupt an otherwise uniform stretch of roadside corn. About eight rows into the cornfield, well hidden from the road, two buckets of rotting, fly-covered tomatoes still sat.
According to the sheriff’s department, the driver of a Lincoln or Cadillac stopped, got out and threatened to shoot whoever threw the tomatoes Monday night.
The vehicle turned around and drove past the cornfield again. The car was struck with tomatoes a second time.
About 25 minutes later the vehicle passed the cornfield two more times. On a third pass, the driver stopped and challenged the group to throw more tomatoes — then fired his shotgun into the cornfield.
NO SUSPECTS
The sheriff’s department did not have a suspect, only a vague description of a middle-aged male of medium height.
Residents say the community will be nervous until the shooter is caught.
“People won’t be resting too good until they know who it is at least,” said Ivan Miller, 41. “He should be punished. The guy lost it.”
Wayne Miller, an Amish man from nearby Kidron, said the young people “shouldn’t have been throwing tomatoes.”
“But if people start shooting people for throwing tomatoes, this country’s in bad shape,” he said.
Keim was born into an Amish family, but his family left the Amish church and became Mennonites, said Yoder.
Mennonites share similar beliefs with the Amish, but drive cars and use more modern conveniences.
“He was a real outgoing person, always willing to help you,” Yoder said.
© 2003 Associated Press. All rights reserved.
I still can't figure out why Amish would have a paintball gun and why the heck anyone would think it was OK to throw tomatoes at passing cars?
Ravyn