OCALA, Fla. — A white woman charged with fatally shooting her Black neighbor through a door has a history of harassing area children and using racial slurs against them, neighbors said Wednesday.

Susan Louise Lorincz, 58, was arrested Tuesday on charges of manslaughter with a firearm, culpable negligence, battery and two counts of assault, the Marion County Sheriff’s Office said in a statement. Manslaughter with a firearm is a felony punishable by up to 30 years in prison.

The arrest came days after authorities said Lorincz shot Ajike “AJ” Owens, a 35-year-old mother of four, through a closed door in Ocala on Friday night. At least two of her children witnessed the shooting, according to the sheriff’s office, which was criticized by civil rights attorney Ben Crump and Owens’ family over the pace of the investigation.

June 7, 202307:16

It was not immediately clear whether Lorincz, who is being held in the Marion County Jail, had an attorney who could speak on her behalf.

In interviews with NBC News, neighbors recalled the times they said the suspect recorded their children, taunted them with slurs, called the police and waved guns at them — just for being kids.

Sharna Mozell, 36, who has lived in the neighborhood about 12 years, said Lorincz “was a problem with the kids.”

“It’s quiet out here, nobody bothers nobody,” she said. “You know, the kids are always playing. I never had any complaints about any kids. Everybody gets along. And it’s no matter if they’re white, Black, Puerto Rican, everybody, everybody.”

‘Everybody in this neighborhood has feuded with this lady over our children’

Phyllis Wills, 33, lived in the neighborhood for about 15 years. She knew Wilson and knew of Lorincz “because she used to come outside all the time and harass our kids,” she said. “Everybody in this neighborhood has feuded with this lady over our children.”

She said Lorincz had a problem with children simply being children.

Susan Louise Lorincz
Susan Louise Lorincz was arrested on charges of manslaughter with a firearm, culpable negligence, battery and two counts of assault.Marion County Sheriff’s Office

“Our kids used to play in the field over there all the time. It’s an apartment complex. These are children who, you know, they’re, they’re going to do things. … Every time they’ve went even in the patch of grass over there, she would be like, ‘Get off of my lawn, you b—- or you retards or you N-word.’ She would wave guns at them,” Wills said.

Wills continued: “She recorded them every time she’s came outside. She’s gotten into her truck and blasted the radio as loud as she could to agitate the kids. She’s gotten into her truck and laid on the horn for long periods of time to agitate them, as well. She sped out in her truck out here, just crazy things.”

She said she never called the police on Lorincz but has “stood in my yard and yelled at her for the way she talks to the kids. But I’ve never actually had a conversation with her. She wasn’t somebody that you can converse with.”

‘Mama, Karen called the police on us today’

Mozell said Lorincz would record children playing outside and taunt them. Her children are 19, 18, 17 and 10. Her 10-year-old daughter would most frequently play outside with other children in the neighborhood.

“She used to come outside, and she used to record them constantly. And she’ll just flick them off while she’s recording the kids, calling them out their names,” Mozell said.

She added that Lorincz would bully children and was known in the neighborhood as a “Karen,” a derogatory term for a white woman who harasses people of color and has a reputation for racism. Mozell said her youngest daughter told her that Lorincz would record them and then contact authorities for the mere act of playing.

“‘Mama, Karen called the police on us today,” Mozell said her daughter would tell her.

She continued: “But the police never do anything … because we’re kids, we’re just playing. Like, I don’t understand, like, what was her motive or what was the problem?”

‘This world is really, really nasty’

The shooting happened around 9 p.m. Friday. Lorincz had been angry because Owens’ children were playing in a nearby field and “engaged in an argument” with the children, the sheriff’s office said.

During the argument, Lorincz threw a skate at Owens’ 10-year-old son and later swung an umbrella at him and his sibling, according to the sheriff’s office. Owens then knocked on Lorincz’s door multiple times, and Lorincz shot her through the door, the sheriff’s office said.

Owens was shot in the upper chest and died, according to the sheriff’s office.

Willis was preparing dinner for her children when one of Owens’ children pounded on her door.

“It was so loud my windows were shaking,” she said. “So I’m like, “What the heck?” And I go and I opened the door and it’s Isaac, her oldest son, and he’s like gasping for air. He can’t even barely talk. And he’s like, ‘The lady shot my mom!’ “

“When he said that, I already know who he’s talking about, because she’s the only person out here that feuded with the children,” she added.

Crump, who is representing the Owens family, and the slain woman’s relatives and loved ones have said that Lorincz called Owens’ children racial slurs prior to the fatal encounter.

Lorincz told investigators that she acted in self-defense “and that Owens had been trying to break down her door prior to her discharging her firearm,” the sheriff’s office said in a statement.

Crump has raised questions about race and Florida’s “stand your ground” self-defense law.

“While we are relieved that the woman apparently responsible for the tragic killing of Ajike ‘AJ’ Owens has been arrested, we are no less concerned that accountability has taken this long because archaic laws like Stand Your Ground exist,” attorneys for Owens’ family, including Crump, said in a statement Tuesday night.

Mozell’s son, Jamerien Wilson, 18, said he witnessed the aftermath of Owens being shot.

He said that when he went outside, he saw police cars everywhere and then saw Owens on the ground and someone performing CPR. He said he didn’t know at the time what happened and didn’t know Owens had been shot.

Wilson said he didn’t know Owens well, but knows her 12-year-old son because they would play basketball together with other neighborhood children.

“She never bothered nobody. She was most definitely always in the house and doing what she had to do for her kids,” he said.

Wilson said the fatal shooting is tragic.

“You done took this woman away from her kids. … Just another Black soul lost to earth, you know. It’s just not what we need. Bro, this world is really, really nasty,” he said.

‘It was simply a killing’

Sheriff Billy Woods said investigators were legally required to investigate whether Florida’s “stand your ground” law applied before they made an arrest.

He said the killing of Owens was not justified under the self-defense law.

“It was simply a killing,” Woods said.

In an interview earlier Tuesday, Crump said there could be no justification for the killing.

“No way she should feel that this person knocking on the door would be able to cause death to her or imminent bodily harm,” he said. “And if she did feel fear, call the police. Why shoot through a metal door?”

Lorincz fired one shot through the door, the sheriff’s office said.

Crump said that Owens’ children had been playing in a field near an apartment complex and that the woman who would later shoot her yelled at them. One of the children left an iPad behind, which the woman took, he said.

A sheriff’s incident report, which is redacted, mentions that deputies were told at the scene that an iPad was taken by a woman who was at that time described as a suspect.

Deputies had been responding to a call about trespassing that night when they were informed there was a shooting, and they arrived to find Owens lying on the grass not breathing after having been shot, according to a sheriff’s office incident report.

Mozell said her neighbor’s fatal shooting has been tough to deal with. Ocala is a city of around 63,000 residents about 60 miles northwest of Orlando.

“The mood has changed, the vibe has changed out here. Nothing’s really different, but you could feel it. It’s eerie now because it’s always been quiet. And it’s just like something major, like that happening is just like, so sad. We’re not used to things like that,” she said.

Minyvonne Burke reported from Ocala, Florida, and Antonio Planas from New York City.

Source: | This article originally belongs to Nbcnews.com

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