Johnny O'Kane and Michelle "Shellie" Stamper |
Johnny O'Kane Killing Girlfriend Makes
No Sense And Just Leaves Tattered Hearts Scattered To The Winds
By Diana L. Chapman
I drove by the house where it happened,
just around the corner from where I live in San Pedro, not knowing what I was
looking for. I don't know if I just wanted to be drenched in more sadness. Or
if I just was looking for his kids, who are really adults now, but to me they
are still kids. Nice kids.
I
know both of them.
Maybe I was looking for a sense of
solace. Maybe a way to make sense out of something that makes no sense and
never will. Maybe I was looking for a way to get rid of my anger that Johnny
O'Kane had just shattered so many people's lives, especially his kids, and
shredded the hearts of another family, turning them into a pulp that will never completely heal.
What I did get oddly from the visit was a soothing
sense of peace -- a symbol I can only paint for you through words as I had no
camera to capture this image and one that perhaps some readers might just laugh
at. But it worked for me. I can't say why.
First, I spotted the shrine to Michelle
Stamper -- a group of burning candles with "we'll miss you" signs and
a colorful butterfly at the spot where the 45-year-old woman also known by the
nickname "Shellie" --was shot to death across from O'Kane's house on Almeria
Street directly behind my home.
I
heard two shots ring out one right after another at 10:35 p.m. the dreadful night
of Nov. 2. It was just the beginning of the shredding hearts in the stillness
of the black night that soon burst into the sounds of loud sirens and a roaring
helicopter. That's when it became all too clear this wasn't a movie shoot or someone fooling around with a gun.
Something bad had gone down in the seaside Palisades
area of San Pedro, where crime is less, not more.
The next day, the community learned that
Johnny O'Kane, 55, a well-regarded leader in the iron worker's union, also popular
with many town residents he befriended -- including me -- chased down and shot
Stamper, his girlfriend, outside his home that night apparently over a dispute
that turned deadly for both. He shot her in the head twice.
Within minutes, he then called police and
reported what happened before shooting himself. He died three days later at
County Harbor UCLA Medical Center surrounded by colleagues and family, who were
trying to come to grips with this tragic turn of events, according to news
accounts.
O'Kane, a tall and lanky bearded man who
sported tattoos, apparently had many faces. He was kind and thoughtful to some.
Tough to others. The kind face was what he showed me on our many chats on life
when I bumped into him at our local Corner Store or walking along Paseo del Mar,
a roadway along the ocean.
I'm sure he was not that kind man with the
tough blue collar crowd he worked with or he wouldn't have survived as one of
their leaders or earned the respect he received.
I'm sure he was not that man when he gunned down
Stamper, who left behind three grown children, Evelyn, the oldest,
Robert, and Anthony Jordan, all in their 20s. They now are left with a horrendous mess of pain
and cruel hurt that will never fully mend and with a raging beast called grief.
While I did not know Stamper, who was
born and raised here, those who did say she was one of the kindest woman they'd
ever known. She also left behind her
father, brother and many cousins, aunts, uncles and scores of friends.
"She was absolutely the sweetest,
most gentle person," said Mona Sutton, who co-owns the Omelette and Waffle
Shop with Leslie Jones, adding Stamper worked a short stint at their restaurant
becoming close friends with many of their waitresses and for many years at the
San Pedro Brewing Company. "She was a fixture here (in the community). I
can't even get over it."
On her face book page, Sutton wrote:
"So sad that such a sweet, gentle woman's life had to end in such a
violent heinous way. Murdered in the town she grew up, worked and raised her
children in. Her children need our support."
A heavily packed memorial service was
held for Stamper on Saturday.
The Stamper family is not blaming
O'Kane's children, Honor and Andrew, for what happened, a family friend said.
But both families will go through a swath of emotions that are often unreasonable as
they grieve. Grief too has many faces; family members will have to pilot through a storm of sentiments that could include anything from a hazy fog of disbelief to ugly waves of torment.
I thank God that Stamper's family is
willing to try not to blame O'Kane's children, because this community can be
divisive and cruel when it wants to be. Blaming two innocent kids is not what
we need to do. O'Kane's children already know what nature's cruelty means and now
they must live here facing residents knowing fully what their father has done.
Honor, who is in her late teens, and
Andrew, an iron worker in his early 20s, already learned what heartbreak meant when
they lost their mother, Maggie, to cancer in 2004. It seared the family deeply,
riddling them with scars that only other families who've faced this crises can
understand.
Now, Honor and Andrew are facing a new
sea of sorrow they have to reckon with. They apparently had come home to
celebrate their father's 55th birthday that night and found instead a bevy of
police cars and blaring lights, according to news accounts.
I kept asking myself how could O'Kane do
this to his kids, leave them in this mess, a muck so disturbing that it will
take them years, perhaps their lifetimes, to crawl out of? Perhaps, and very
likely, this will be the same for the Stampers too.
I also know how union workers might
elevate O'Kane's reputation, forgetting that he killed a woman who grew up here and
left behind a slew of loved ones. And how others will call O'Kane a murderer when
his kids might be standing there. Or the kids might read it as one Daily Breeze reader posted
it on a comment section in the newspaper. Let's not even mention what can go on
face book where people can say anything anonymously and recklessly and not care
who gets hurt.
I can ask for people to
refrain and be sensitive to those around them in this tragic and horrific incident.
Having traveled down this road before, I have my doubts that they will. When
asked to do so, it just seems to drive some into a furious shark frenzy to post even nastier words and do
it with great pleasure.
We can all agree on one thing I suppose.
This shooting didn't have to happen and these two people should be here now, alive
and with their families today, getting up to brush their teeth in the
morning, witness another sunrise, see
the powder blue skies buffeted with clouds, celebrate more birthdays and watch
their grand kids arrive one by one.
They should be here. But they are not. It
just took a few dreary minutes, a horrible decision and a gun to erase their
lives and leave dozens of shredded hearts scattered to the winds.
As I turned the corner in my car, I became more incensed even though I knew it
made no sense. The emotion was clinging to me like an unwanted shadow, not doing
anyone any good, especially me. Perhaps it was because the last time I saw
Honor she was so excited about life. She was mapping out her future. She was gleaming with happiness that even her
cute freckles glowed.
After I spotted Stamper's shrine, I
looked over at the O'Kane household perched on a hilly street draped with lacy
fichus trees. An old, black jalopy, obviously not working, sat in the driveway.
And then I saw a set of peacocks, doing something I've never seen the fowls do
before, even though I have them roosting in my yard on a daily basis.
A male and female sat on the jalopy's
shady roof top, kissing, crooning, nurturing each other -- just two giant lovebirds
oblivious to anything else going on in the world like a young couple kissing
passionately, romantically on a public street, each moment sweet and dripping
with love as though two beings folded into one.
I could barely move and just sat there
watching. A gentle peacefulness descended on me. I no longer felt angry. It
left me with this: we have not one family that has been devastated in this
town, but two. Both families are victims.
All the rest of us can do is try to reach
out and grab few pieces of their tattered hearts and pull them back in from the
winds.
1 comment:
Your story was heart-felt. I wish the family well. We need to learn how to deal with relationship issues in a manner that does not lead to violence. As a community we need to look out for each other.
Mark R.
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