"When you turn on the news and you see a 14-year-old kid that's murdered someone, or been murdered, I think it's time that we step up and try to do our part to inform these kids on the positive path."
That's the message from Shawn Lightfoot, a community leader in Salisbury, Md., who organized the first-ever "Streets Didn't Raise Me" mentorship conference for young people in the area, the Delmarva Daily Times reports.
"When you see a 14-year-old kid that's murdered someone, or been murdered, I think it's time that we step up and try to do our part to inform these kids on the positive path," Lightfoot tells the Daily Times.
He says he and his wife decided to organize the conference after seeing news reports of young people in trouble on the streets.
"When you turn on the news and you see a 14-year-old kid that's murdered someone, or been murdered, I think it's time that we step up and try to do our part to inform these kids on the positive path," Lightfoot says.
"They need to know that they're important, they need learn self-love, because that's not
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