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Amaia Alysse Edmond

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Amaia Alysse Edmond

Birth
Death
23 Jul 2010 (aged 7)
Lansing, Ingham County, Michigan, USA
Burial
Lansing, Ingham County, Michigan, USA Add to Map
Plot
Sec. D
Memorial ID
View Source
UPDATE August 1, 2011

A HUGE thank you to the person that sent this link to me! It brought tears to my eyes!! What an amazing story <3

http://www.hollandsentinel.com/feature/x242967083/Hollands-Mike-Lopez-saved-by-liver-transplant
************************************************************
^^^UPDATE APRIL 18, 2011^^^

Amaia's stepfather testified in court that he believes he shot (accidently) her. The intruders entered the home and her stepfather ran upstairs to retrieve his gun. He open fired with his eyes closed and when he opened them, Amaia had been shot. :( :(
***********************************************************
I am very, very bothered/touched by this story, so I felt very compelled to add this record for Amaia. I don't understand people that can do this to a child...under ANY circumstance. :( I just can't fathom it.
************************************************************

From the Lansing State Journal:

7, of Lansing, Wexford Montessori student, died July 23. Services noon Friday at Union Missionary Baptist Church. Arrangements by Riley Funeral Home.

***********************************************************
LANSING -- Lansing police have identified a 7-year-old who was fatally shot in a Thursday night shootout as Amaia Alysse Edmond of Lansing.

The shooting occurred shortly before midnight, police said, after a group of men broke into her home in the 100 block of Custer Avenue where she lived with her mother, step father and two siblings.

"We're still aggressively looking for the three suspects that came to rob the house," said Lt. Noel Garcia.

Police reported earlier that there was an exchange of gunfire between a man who lived there and at least one of the intruders.

"We just know that there were a number of gunshots that were exchanged," Garcia had said. Investigators believe the shooting was not random, but they would not elaborate.

The girl was shot in the head and rushed to Sparrow Hospital. She was pronounced dead shortly after 2 p.m. Friday, Garcia said. He provided no additional details, such as where the girl was in the house when she was shot.

A 23-year-old Lansing man - who investigators believed was involved in the incident - had been in police custody on an unrelated charge, police said. Garcia wouldn't provide further details.

"I don't want to compromise the integrity of the investigation," he said.

One of the suspects is described as a black man in his 20s, about 5 feet, 8 inches tall, with light skin. He was last seen wearing a white T-shirt and a white hat.

The second suspect is described as a black man in his 20s, between 6 feet and 6 feet, 2 inches tall, with a thin build. He was last seen wearing a red shirt and shorts.

The third suspect also was described as wearing a red shirt, but Garcia had no other information. He said talk circulating in the community that all three were wearing red shirts is inaccurate.

***********************************************************

From the Lansing State Journal Jan. 11, 11

When John Edmond talks about his daughter, he talks about her zest for life, her independent streak, the joy she took in her family, friends and classmates.

"Amaia was the type of person who was always trying to help someone," he said. "She just had the biggest heart."

Amaia died July 23 after she was shot during a home invasion at her mother and stepfather's Lansing residence; the incident remains under investigation.

But Amaia's legacy goes far beyond the family and friends who loved her and miss her still.

Her heart now beats inside the body of another 7-year-old whose life was saved by her donation.

A 9-year-old breathes fresh air into lungs received from Amaia.

Two adults each got a kidney from her; another adult received her liver.

"You are the living angel for me, the angel that has answered my prayers," one of the kidney recipients wrote in a letter to John Edmond. "Her energy and strength will continue to live on."

Edmond said making the decision to donate Amaia's organs was not a difficult one for him.

"It was something that felt natural," he said. "I wasn't going to let her die in vain."

But organ donation is not Amaia's only legacy. Her death has spurred her father toward increased community involvement.

Edmond, 33, works at General Motors Co.'s Delta plant, but previously has worked in kids' programs for Lansing's Parks and Recreation Department and as a counselor at Highfields.

He and his wife, Sonya, live in a pleasant ranch house in a Delhi Township subdivision with their 2-year-old son, Julian. Amaia had her own room there, complete with dolls, stuffed animals and a Disney "The Princess and the Frog" blanket. John Edmond shared custody of Amaia with her mother, who lived on Custer Street in Lansing with her husband and two sons.
Still volunteering

Edmond says Amaia was a steadying influence on his life from the moment she was born on May 31, 2003.

"I believe God put her in my life to give me some direction and some substance," he said.

Edmond continues to volunteer at Lansing's Wexford Elementary School, a public Montessori school where she would have been in second grade.

He shared Amaia's clothes and shoes earlier this school year, donating them to her school friends.

"I had one little girl come up to me and say, 'Look, I've got Amaia's pants on!' " he said.

He recruited Black Men Inc. of Greater Lansing to help him rally parents to support kids on the first day of school this year. The message: Parents, especially dads, must be involved in their kids' educations.

Wexford Principal Nabila Boctor recalled Amaia as a helpful, happy child who greeted her enthusiastically every day.

She said Edmond is a welcome volunteer at Wexford.

"He gives them encouragement, tells them to listen to the teacher," she said. "He helps them during lunchtime, just to be around if somebody is having a problem and they want to talk to him."
Talking to teens

Edmond also has been working with Lansing police Capt. Ray Hall to bring home to teenagers the importance of reporting criminal activity. He's speaking on the topic this week at Sexton High School, his alma mater.

"What a commendable thing for him to do," Lansing police spokesman Lt. Noel Garcia said. "It would be so easy for him to just go on with his life, but he used this as an opportunity to educate and hopefully help our young people."

Edmond hopes someday to be able to meet the five people whose lives were saved by Amaia's organs.

Tim Makinen, spokesman for Gift of Life Michigan, said the donation serves as an example to others.

"This was a tragedy for the family, but in their time of grief they were able to look beyond themselves to help others," he said. "Amaia's spirit and generosity now live on."
UPDATE August 1, 2011

A HUGE thank you to the person that sent this link to me! It brought tears to my eyes!! What an amazing story <3

http://www.hollandsentinel.com/feature/x242967083/Hollands-Mike-Lopez-saved-by-liver-transplant
************************************************************
^^^UPDATE APRIL 18, 2011^^^

Amaia's stepfather testified in court that he believes he shot (accidently) her. The intruders entered the home and her stepfather ran upstairs to retrieve his gun. He open fired with his eyes closed and when he opened them, Amaia had been shot. :( :(
***********************************************************
I am very, very bothered/touched by this story, so I felt very compelled to add this record for Amaia. I don't understand people that can do this to a child...under ANY circumstance. :( I just can't fathom it.
************************************************************

From the Lansing State Journal:

7, of Lansing, Wexford Montessori student, died July 23. Services noon Friday at Union Missionary Baptist Church. Arrangements by Riley Funeral Home.

***********************************************************
LANSING -- Lansing police have identified a 7-year-old who was fatally shot in a Thursday night shootout as Amaia Alysse Edmond of Lansing.

The shooting occurred shortly before midnight, police said, after a group of men broke into her home in the 100 block of Custer Avenue where she lived with her mother, step father and two siblings.

"We're still aggressively looking for the three suspects that came to rob the house," said Lt. Noel Garcia.

Police reported earlier that there was an exchange of gunfire between a man who lived there and at least one of the intruders.

"We just know that there were a number of gunshots that were exchanged," Garcia had said. Investigators believe the shooting was not random, but they would not elaborate.

The girl was shot in the head and rushed to Sparrow Hospital. She was pronounced dead shortly after 2 p.m. Friday, Garcia said. He provided no additional details, such as where the girl was in the house when she was shot.

A 23-year-old Lansing man - who investigators believed was involved in the incident - had been in police custody on an unrelated charge, police said. Garcia wouldn't provide further details.

"I don't want to compromise the integrity of the investigation," he said.

One of the suspects is described as a black man in his 20s, about 5 feet, 8 inches tall, with light skin. He was last seen wearing a white T-shirt and a white hat.

The second suspect is described as a black man in his 20s, between 6 feet and 6 feet, 2 inches tall, with a thin build. He was last seen wearing a red shirt and shorts.

The third suspect also was described as wearing a red shirt, but Garcia had no other information. He said talk circulating in the community that all three were wearing red shirts is inaccurate.

***********************************************************

From the Lansing State Journal Jan. 11, 11

When John Edmond talks about his daughter, he talks about her zest for life, her independent streak, the joy she took in her family, friends and classmates.

"Amaia was the type of person who was always trying to help someone," he said. "She just had the biggest heart."

Amaia died July 23 after she was shot during a home invasion at her mother and stepfather's Lansing residence; the incident remains under investigation.

But Amaia's legacy goes far beyond the family and friends who loved her and miss her still.

Her heart now beats inside the body of another 7-year-old whose life was saved by her donation.

A 9-year-old breathes fresh air into lungs received from Amaia.

Two adults each got a kidney from her; another adult received her liver.

"You are the living angel for me, the angel that has answered my prayers," one of the kidney recipients wrote in a letter to John Edmond. "Her energy and strength will continue to live on."

Edmond said making the decision to donate Amaia's organs was not a difficult one for him.

"It was something that felt natural," he said. "I wasn't going to let her die in vain."

But organ donation is not Amaia's only legacy. Her death has spurred her father toward increased community involvement.

Edmond, 33, works at General Motors Co.'s Delta plant, but previously has worked in kids' programs for Lansing's Parks and Recreation Department and as a counselor at Highfields.

He and his wife, Sonya, live in a pleasant ranch house in a Delhi Township subdivision with their 2-year-old son, Julian. Amaia had her own room there, complete with dolls, stuffed animals and a Disney "The Princess and the Frog" blanket. John Edmond shared custody of Amaia with her mother, who lived on Custer Street in Lansing with her husband and two sons.
Still volunteering

Edmond says Amaia was a steadying influence on his life from the moment she was born on May 31, 2003.

"I believe God put her in my life to give me some direction and some substance," he said.

Edmond continues to volunteer at Lansing's Wexford Elementary School, a public Montessori school where she would have been in second grade.

He shared Amaia's clothes and shoes earlier this school year, donating them to her school friends.

"I had one little girl come up to me and say, 'Look, I've got Amaia's pants on!' " he said.

He recruited Black Men Inc. of Greater Lansing to help him rally parents to support kids on the first day of school this year. The message: Parents, especially dads, must be involved in their kids' educations.

Wexford Principal Nabila Boctor recalled Amaia as a helpful, happy child who greeted her enthusiastically every day.

She said Edmond is a welcome volunteer at Wexford.

"He gives them encouragement, tells them to listen to the teacher," she said. "He helps them during lunchtime, just to be around if somebody is having a problem and they want to talk to him."
Talking to teens

Edmond also has been working with Lansing police Capt. Ray Hall to bring home to teenagers the importance of reporting criminal activity. He's speaking on the topic this week at Sexton High School, his alma mater.

"What a commendable thing for him to do," Lansing police spokesman Lt. Noel Garcia said. "It would be so easy for him to just go on with his life, but he used this as an opportunity to educate and hopefully help our young people."

Edmond hopes someday to be able to meet the five people whose lives were saved by Amaia's organs.

Tim Makinen, spokesman for Gift of Life Michigan, said the donation serves as an example to others.

"This was a tragedy for the family, but in their time of grief they were able to look beyond themselves to help others," he said. "Amaia's spirit and generosity now live on."

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