‘Bring His Head To Me,’ Mayor To Police Looking For Shooter

Florida Governor Rick Scott, left, looks on as Tampa Mayor Bob Buckhorn talks about $1billion expansion plan for Tampa International Airport during a news conference Wednesday, March 5, 2014, in Tampa, Fla. The state will give $194 million to help pay for the largest expansion since the airport’s opening in 1971, with the airport covering the rest of the bill. Photo: AP Photo/Chris O’Meara.

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) — The mayor of a Florida city told police officers looking for a suspect in three fatal and apparently random shootings in one neighborhood to hunt him down and “bring his head to me.”

News outlets report that Tampa Mayor Bob Buckhorn addressed the officers Wednesday afternoon during a roll call in the Seminole Heights neighborhood where two men and one woman have been gunned down while walking since Oct. 9.

“Bring his head to me, all right?” Buckhorn said. “Let’s go get it done.”

Buckhorn and interim police Chief Brian Dugan told the officers they’ve brought “a sense of calmness” to the terrorized neighborhood near downtown Tampa. Then, officers headed out by patrol car, bicycle and on foot to resume patrols.

The Tampa Bay Times reports the mayor and police chief talked afterward to reporters, detailing the work that’s been done but offering no new details in the unsolved killings that began Oct. 9 when Benjamin Mitchell, 22, was shot. Two days later Monicoa Hoffa, 32, was gunned down. And on Oct. 19, Anthony Naiboa, 20, was shot after taking the wrong bus home from his new job. Police patrolling in the neighborhood actually heard the gunshots and rushed to the scene to find Naiboa dead.

All three victims, who didn’t know each other, rode the bus and were alone when they were shot on the street, authorities said. None of the victims was robbed.

Over the past few weeks, Tampa Electric Co. and public works teams have been cutting foliage, boarding up vacant buildings and replaced burnt-out street lights in the area, the mayor said.

“We’re going to shine a very, very bright light on this community,” Buckhorn said.

Police have asked residents to keep porch lights on in the neighborhood at night.

The chief promised nervous parents that the community will be safe for Halloween next week.

“I’m gonna go out there,” he said. “I’ll be personally on patrol, and you know what? If somebody wants to walk with me, they can walk with me. I’ll walk with their family and get candy with them. I might even take some of their candy.”