Baltimore Man, 22, Shot on N. Bond Street Dies the Following Day
Shawn Hicks Jr., 22, was shot and killed March 29 on N. Bond Street; three male suspects fled the scene and remain unidentified.

Shawn Hicks Jr. was 22 years old when he was shot on N. Bond Street late on a Sunday night. He died the next day, March 30, making him one of Baltimore's earliest homicide victims of 2026 in an Eastern District that has drawn sustained attention from police commanders and community advocates alike.
Officers responded to the 1400 block of N. Bond Street at approximately 9:50 p.m. on March 29 and found Hicks suffering from a gunshot wound. He was transported to a local hospital in critical condition. The Baltimore Police Department announced his death the following afternoon as homicide detectives took over the investigation.
Three unidentified male suspects were observed fleeing northbound from the scene into the 1500 block of N. Bond Street immediately after the shooting. As of this week, detectives have not determined a motive, and no arrests have been announced.
The case lands against a complicated statistical backdrop. Baltimore recorded 133 homicide investigations in 2025, its lowest total in nearly 50 years and a 31 percent decrease from 2024. City officials and community violence interrupters have pointed to that figure as evidence that sustained investment in prevention is working. But each new fatality in 2026 tests that momentum, and families in the Eastern District know that aggregate progress offers little comfort when the victim is their own.
The Eastern District, which covers parts of East and Southeast Baltimore, recorded multiple shootings in the weeks surrounding Hicks' death, including an incident on the 2400 block of Garrett Avenue on March 14. The Hicks shooting fits a documented pattern of late-night gunfire in the area.

Whether community violence intervention resources are funded at adequate levels in the specific blocks around N. Bond Street, and whether surveillance infrastructure is helping detectives identify the three men who ran north into the 1500 block that night, are questions city officials have not answered publicly.
Anyone with information on the March 29 shooting is asked to contact homicide detectives at 410-396-2100 or submit an anonymous tip to Metro Crime Stoppers at 1-866-7LOCKUP. Baltimore's Mayor's Office of Neighborhood Safety and Engagement can connect families of victims with grief counseling and community support services.
Three men ran from the scene. Shawn Hicks Jr. did not.
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