
Precisely a month after 14-year-old Rashawn Williams was fatally stabbed outside a Mission District convenience store by a former middle school classmate, his family painfully, yet prominently, displayed his picture on the lawn outside the Hall of Justice on Oct. 2.
Williamsâ family, who created the makeshift memorial honoring the fallen teen at 850 Bryant St., demanded justice.
âThe family wants the murderer to be tried as an adult,â said Williamsâ aunt Ruth Morales, as she set up signs that read âStop Bullyingâ and âJustice for Rashawn.â
The Oct. 2 rally was spurred on by District Attorney George GascĂłnâs decision to have the 14-year-old suspectâs trial take place in juvenile court.
âItâs not right that he took Rashawnâs life, and that theyâre talking about releasing him at age 23, if he gets convicted as a juvenile,â said Morales. âThatâs not right. It was premeditated. And it was violent. He needs to be tried as an adult.â
Williams was exiting the Rubin Market liquor store at 26th and Folsom streets on Sept. 2 when he was fatally attacked by two boys. The one 14-year-old suspect that was arrested a day after the attack had known him since kindergarten, Williamsâ family said.
Williams, who was a freshman at Sacred Heart Cathedral on a near full academic scholarship, had attended Buena Vista Horace Mann Elementary school with the suspect.
The victimâs family claims that the fatal incident stemmed from Williams being bullied by the suspect last year.
âI donât really believe it was so much of a tragedy, because the red flags were there,â Morales said. âWe went to the people that we had to go to, to ask for help. And we didnât get the help that we needed.â
During a San Francisco Unified School District board meeting on Sept. 23, Williamsâ family informed the school board that they had in fact brought the bullying issue to the schoolâs attention.
âI come before you today, the same way that my sister went to her school and asked for help,â Morales said at the school board on Sept. 23. âSo please do not fail us againâŠWhen our children cry for help, they need help.â
El Tecolote contacted school officials at Horace Mann for comment, and the school districtâs Chief Communications Officer Gentle Blythe responded:
âDue to Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act, SFUSD staff cannot discuss any current or former students with members of the public.â
Williamsâ family is currently gathering signatures for an online petition to have the suspect tried as an adult.
Greg Feldman, attorney in the cityâs Public Defenderâs office, is representing the suspect. The next court date in the case is scheduled for Oct. 21 at the Youth Guidance Center.


