Mass Shooting Involving Black Shooters and Black Victims Breaks Out After the Game in Town Where “Civil Rights” Were Birthed
Paul Kersey, Unz Review, October 5, 2025
What happens when two different college football games end in the same city, with the four participants all Historical Black Colleges Universities (HBCU), and the almost entirely black fanbases spill out to enjoy a fun night on the town?
Stereotypical black behavior, even with the alumni of Tuskegee and Morehouse present, two “prestigious” HBCUs who were playing each other in Montgomery, Alabama this past weekend.
There’s a reason the Iron Bowl (annual battle between Auburn University and the University of Alabama) was moved out of 72% Birmingham for good in 1998, with the game played on each school’s campus every other year, and why you never hear about mass shootings erupting after 100,000 White people finish watching a game at Jordan-Hare Stadium or Bryant-Denny Stadium… because it’s more likely the heavily black football teams will attend a party after the games where the shooting will take place.[Montgomery mass shooting kills teen and woman; 12 others injured: ‘This is not who we are’, AL.com, October 5, 2025]:
A mass shooting in downtown Montgomery on Saturday night left two people – including a teen – dead and a dozen others injured during what should have been a weekend of celebration in Alabama’s capital city.
The gunfire erupted shortly after 11:30 p.m. Saturday near Bibb Street and Commerce Street.
A total of 12 people were injured. Two people were killed – 17-year-old Jeremiah Morris and 43-year-old Shalonda Williams.
Two juveniles are among those wounded. One has life-threatening injuries, police said, and the other suffered non-life-threatening injuries.
In all, five victims remain in life-threatening condition, and seven sustained non-life-threatening injuries.
Seven of the victims are under the age of 20 and the youngest victim is 16, said Montgomery Police Chief Jim Graboys in a Sunday press conference.
The police chief started his remarks at the press conference with this: “I’m collecting my thoughts right now because of how angry I am,” Graboys said. “My feelings of my anger and my heart are out those for those families.”
Mayor Steven Reed said despite the mass shooting, he believes the city is safe.
“We aren’t going to let one or two bad apples spoil the bunch,” the mayor said. “We’re going to find the ones that are rotten and we’re going to get them the hell out of here.”
Authorities also announced a $50,000 reward is being offered for information that leads to those responsible.
Montgomery has had 52 homicides this year. The city recorded 61 homicides in 2024 and 75 in 2023.
Graboys said police were called around 11:30 p.m. The officers, he said, could hear the shooting.
“This started as the result of an individual, one of these 14 (injured or killed), who we believe was targeted, in which basically an exchange of gunfire erupted,” he said.
“When that exchange erupted, multiple people in the crowd pulled their own weapons and started discharging,” Graboys said. “Now, as you can imagine, that can be a very chaotic situation and every weapon has to be accounted for and every piece of evidence has to be processed.”
The shooters, he said, “did not care about the people around them when they did it.”
The chief said automatic gunfire was used. Police recovered multiple shell casings and weapons from the scene.
“The weapons all had magazine capacities,” he said. “Some had very high capacities.”
At least two of the victims were among those armed, he said, but could not yet say how many of the wounded were innocent bystanders.
Graboys said investigators were interviewing potential suspects, although no one has yet been charged.
“We will do everything we need to gather every bit of evidence to chase down whoever is involved,” Graboys said.
“My personal opinion is this was very much preventable because the individuals who pulled the trigger are responsible for this,” the chief said. “They carried those weapons into this crowd and at any time they could have walked away from this or walked away from whatever was happening but they did not.”
The chief said the department is bringing every resource in, including the FBI, ATF, ALEA and the Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office.
“We are laser-focused,” Grayboys said. “We’re not going to let anything distract us.”
The shooting happened after the end of the Morehouse-Tuskegee Classic that brought a crowd to the city’s Cramton Bowl stadium. The city opened a new downtown Ferris wheel this weekend, coinciding with the game.
The Alabama National Fair was also being held at the fairgrounds by Garrett Coliseum this weekend. The Alabama State University homecoming game against Bethune-Cookman University was also held Saturday at ASU Stadium.
Reed said police had planned for the crowds expected in the city, and said there were police units within 50 feet on both sides when the shooting broke out, but that the shooters “had no regard for human life.”
Where the shooting happened was not a sanctioned gathering and not related to activities taking place in the city, Reed said.
“Last night’s incident was unfortunate but it was avoidable,” Reed said. “This is not who we are. This is not who we have been.”
“When we have people who are willing to draw down in a crowded area, that’s reckless and dangerous enough,” the mayor said. “When you have people who are willing to do that with police officers in plain sight within a short distances, I’m not sure that those people can be reacclimated to our society. I’m not sure they can be productive citizens.”
{snip}
Montgomery, Alabama is known as the birthplace of the Civil Rights Movement, where Rose Parks sat in the front of the bus and became the most important heroine in human history. Yet in 2025, when four HBCU’s played in two separate football games on the same weekend, we got a mass shooting involving only Africans in America. Mind you, representing some of the most prestigious HBCU’s in America…
Now you know why the parks in Montgomery were once segregated and why White people have all but abandoned calling the city home, leading the election of the city’s first black mayor in 201 9.
Just as Birmingham (72% black) and Mobile, Alabama both have violent crime problems almost exclusively because of Africans in America, so does the city of Montgomery. Even when “prestigious” HBCU’s all come together for two football games, a mass shooting happens.
Stereotypical black behavior.













