Description
Two 15-year-olds have been charged in connection with the fatal shooting of 19-year-old Kewhyon Hartwell, who was gunned down on a Columbus street in April.
The shooting occurred around 2:45 a.m. on April 29 at the intersection of South Champion and Reinhard avenues, near East Whittier Street. Columbus police said Hartwell was found shot and lying in the street.
RELATED: Police: 15-year-old charged with murder in shooting death of 19-year-old man in south Columbus
One of the suspects, who was 14 at the time of the incident, appeared in court this week. Prosecutors are seeking to have the teen tried as an adult.
“It is an allegation of murder and aggravated robbery,” a prosecutor said during the hearing.
In court, officials described how the teen and two others were allegedly involved in a dispute with Hartwell that escalated into gunfire.
“The juvenile and two other associates had a dispute with the alleged victim over property, which resulted in the shooting and death,” the prosecutor stated.
The teen is being held at the Franklin County Juvenile Intervention Center until his next court appearance.
Youth violence in focus
While overall homicides in Columbus are down compared to the same time last year, police and community leaders are raising alarms over the growing number of teens involved in deadly violence.
As of August 2025, Columbus has reported 48 homicides. Of the suspects identified, 63% are age 21 or younger. Last year at this time, there had been 70 homicides, with 49% of suspects in that same age group.
Malissa Thomas-St. Clair, founder of Mothers of Murdered Columbus Children, said the latest numbers show that efforts to curb violence need to remain strong — even as the overall homicide count declines.
“This is our opportunity to know that the work is not done,” Thomas-St. Clair said. “Even though homicides are down, and that tends to allow us to kind of say, ‘Oh, it’s working,’ sometimes when something works then you pull back a bit. But seeing that shows we have to push on the gas harder and know that the resources are working.”
Her organization focuses on understanding the root causes of youth violence by looking beyond the statistics.
“What we do in our organization is we make sure we don't just pull numbers — we pull the actual stories behind the numbers,” she said. “I would be very interested in finding out who these children are, who their parents are. What is the background, and what is the ‘why’ on the perpetration of this violence?”
Thomas-St. Clair added that community accountability, especially from parents, is crucial.
“We as parents... have said that accountability goes to the parent. When there's a lack of parenting, then you see an uptick of violent crimes in our youth,” she said. “And that's when we, the village, have to step in. Teachers — you're getting ready to go back in the classroom — you have to get to know your students. You have to understand: what are their stories?”
Youth crime by the numbers
According to Columbus police data:
2025 homicides: 48 total
18 victims age 21 or younger
30 suspects
2024 homicides (as of this time last year): 70 total
23 victims
34 suspects
Felonious assaults have also shifted year to year:
2025: 506 assaults
161 victims
265 suspects
2024: 1,115 assaults
240 victims
245 suspects
The investigation into Hartwell’s death remains ongoing.