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SRCThe Guardian - World News
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LEANCenter-Left
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ENT12
MON · 2026-06-22 · 15:50 GMTBRIEF NSR-2026-0622-86435
News/Fatal shooting of one-year-old boy ignites tensions in Missi…
NSR-2026-0622-86435News Report·EN·Social Justice

Fatal shooting of one-year-old boy ignites tensions in Mississippi town

A one-year-old boy, Kohen Wiley, was fatally shot by police in Senatobia, Mississippi, on June 14th. Officers were responding to a shoplifting call at a Walmart when they attempted to stop a vehicle occupied by the child, his mother, and a friend.

Associated PressThe Guardian - World NewsFiled 2026-06-22 · 15:50 GMTLean · Center-LeftRead · 5 min
Fatal shooting of one-year-old boy ignites tensions in Mississippi town
The Guardian - World NewsFIG 01
Reading time
5min
Word count
1 039words
Sources cited
4cited
Entities identified
12entities
Quality score
100%
§ 01

Briefing Summary

AI-generated
NEWSAR · AI

A one-year-old boy, Kohen Wiley, was fatally shot by police in Senatobia, Mississippi, on June 14th. Officers were responding to a shoplifting call at a Walmart when they attempted to stop a vehicle occupied by the child, his mother, and a friend. According to the Mississippi Bureau of Investigation, the vehicle drove towards officers, prompting one to discharge their weapon. The boy's mother disputes this account, stating the vehicle was not driven toward officers and that her friend had paid for the items. This incident has reignited tensions between the Black community and police, drawing comparisons to other fatal encounters involving Black individuals and accusations of petty crimes. Community members and civil rights activists are calling for greater police accountability, citing this as another instance of a Black life lost over minor alleged offenses.

Confidence 0.90Sources 4Claims 5Entities 12
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Article analysis

Model · rule-based
Framing
Social Justice
Human Interest
Tone
Sensational
AI-assessed
CalmNeutralAlarmist
Factuality
0.60 / 1.00
Mixed
LowHigh
Sources cited
4
Well sourced
FewMany
§ 03

Key claims

5 extracted
01

Policing expert Ian Adams stated that shooting into a moving vehicle is a 'very bad idea' and should be avoided.

quoteIan Adams
Confidence
1.00
02

Bernice King stated, 'We are treating items on a shelf as more valuable than a child. That is not just bad policing; it is a moral collapse.'

quoteBernice King
Confidence
1.00
03

A one-year-old boy was fatally shot by police responding to a shoplifting call in Senatobia, Mississippi.

factualarticle
Confidence
1.00
04

The incident has drawn comparisons to the 2023 fatal shooting of Ta'Kiya Young, a pregnant Black woman, by police during a shoplifting response.

factualarticle
Confidence
0.90
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The boy's family has denied the shoplifting claim, stating the diapers were paid for.

factualVellesiya Wiley (mother)
Confidence
0.90
§ 04

Full report

5 min read · 1 039 words
The recent fatal shooting of a 1-year-old boy by police who were responding to a shoplifting call has ignited simmering tensions between police and Black residents in the small town of Senatobia, Mississippi.The death of Kohen Wiley is the latest in a series of troubling encounters with police that have outraged community members in recent years. It has led to protests and calls for greater police accountability in the town of 8,000, with some civil rights activists pointing to Kohen’s death as another example of a Black life lost over something of nominal value. In this case, it was an allegation of stolen diapers, which the boy’s family has denied.“We are treating items on a shelf as more valuable than a child,” Bernice King, the daughter of late US civil rights icon Martin Luther King Jr, said in a statement posted to Instagram. “That is not just bad policing; it is a moral collapse.”Differing accounts of what happenedThere are still many unanswered questions about the shooting and what led up to it.Senatobia police responded to the shoplifting call at a local Walmart on 14 June, a Sunday, where they found two women and a child leaving the store, getting into a car and driving away. According to a statement released by the Mississippi-bureau-of-investigation" class="entity-link entity-organization" data-entity-id="147489" data-entity-type="organization">Mississippi Bureau of Investigation (MBI): “Officers attempted to stop the vehicle, but the driver drove in the direction of the officers, almost striking one. An officer then discharged their weapon and the vehicle fled the scene.”Kohen’s mother, Vellesiya Wiley, said her son and her friend, who was driving, were hit by gunfire. In a video posted on social media on Wednesday by civil rights attorney Ben Crump, who is representing her, Wiley said her friend was not driving toward the officers because they were “all on the right side and she was driving towards the left”.She also disputes the shoplifting claim, saying in the video that she believes her friend paid for the diapers she was carrying.Policing expert Ian Adams, who teaches criminal justice at the University of South Carolina, said regardless of the circumstances, the officer should not have fired at the car.“Modern policing knows that shooting into a moving vehicle is a very bad idea and one to be avoided at almost all costs,” Adams said. For one thing, ”vehicles have other occupants, which is obviously a concern here in the current case.”Shooting revives racial justice concernsKohen was Black, as are his mother and her friend. And the circumstances leading to Kohen’s death quickly drew comparisons to another Black mother fatally shot during a response to a shoplifting accusation.In 2023, Ta’Kiya Young , who was pregnant, was shot by police in a Columbus, Ohio, suburb, after they attempted to apprehend her. Police said Young, who was also the mother of two young sons, got into her car and accelerated in the direction of the officer who fired at her through the windshield. Both Young and her unborn daughter were killed.The officer in that case was acquitted of criminal charges and found justified in his use of force by a review board.The two deaths join a long list of other instances of Black Americans dying in interactions with police after accusations of petty criminal offenses. That list includes the murder of George Floyd by an officer in 2020, who was killed after police responded to a call that he used a fake $20 bill at a Minneapolis grocery store.For some racial justice advocates, such cases serve as a constant reminder of the consequences of systemic racism in law enforcement.“In the name of ‘law and order,’ a child was killed and family was shattered over items that could be restocked, written off, and replaced,” King wrote on Instagram. “Our charge is clear: until the sacredness of human life is the starting point of every police encounter, we must demand changes in training and work unrelentingly to reform policies around police accountability.”Tensions in SenatobiaMarquell Bridges, the president and founder of an advocacy group called the Building Bridges Coalition and who has been helping the Wiley family, said Kohen’s death was “just the breaking point” after years of problematic interactions between Black residents and police.Bridges pointed to a May 2025 encounter in which an officer threatened Breshari Faulkner with a Taser, pulled her from her car onto the ground and arrested her during a confrontation over a handicapped parking space in the same Walmart lot where Kohen was shot.Two years earlier, in 2023, a Senatobia officer was fired for his role in arresting a 10-year-old Black boy who had urinated in a different parking lot. The boy’s family has since settled a federal lawsuit with the city.“There is a culture there that they are above the law – just because they wear a uniform,” said civil rights attorney Carlos Moore, who has represented the 10-year-old boy and others accusing the department of misconduct.Police did not respond to requests for comment from the Associated Press. The mayor and city aldermen also did not respond to messages.About 40% of the city’s population of approximately 8,300 is Black, according to 2020 Census data. Police did not respond to questions about the racial makeup of the department, but the mayor and a majority of the Board of Alderman members are white.The city has elected only three Black aldermen since it became a municipality in 1860, according to the Tate Record, a local newspaper.‘The prettiest smile’The officer who shot Kohen and the woman driving the car he was in has been placed on administrative leave, a standard practice, while the MBI looks into what happened. They have promised to release video of the shooting once the investigation is complete.Kohen’s grandmother, Veronica Roberson, was there when Kohen was born and babysat him often. She described him as a happy little baby with “the prettiest smile you could ever imagine.”She said he was a sweet child and: “He just loved on me, and I loved on him. We loved each other.”One of his favorite toys was a little lawnmower that would blow bubbles when pushed. Roberson would sit outside with him while he played with it.“He really thought he was mowing my yard,” she said, laughing a little at the memory. “That baby was my world.”
§ 05

Entities

12 identified
§ 06

Keywords & salience

10 terms
police shooting
1.00
racial justice
0.90
police accountability
0.80
child death
0.80
shoplifting
0.70
civil rights
0.60
senatobia
0.50
use of force
0.50
black residents
0.40
martin luther king jr
0.40
§ 07

Topic connections

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