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Two Juveniles Shot in Separate Prince George's County Incidents, No Suspects

Fifteen long-gun shell casings recovered after a juvenile male was shot on Greenbelt Road; hours later, a teen girl was hit on Central Ave near Capitol Heights. No suspects.

Lisa Park2 min read
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Two Juveniles Shot in Separate Prince George's County Incidents, No Suspects
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Fifteen long-gun shell casings on Greenbelt Road in Seabrook mark the first of two juvenile shootings that struck Prince George's County in a single overnight stretch, leaving police with no suspects and two young victims in the same 24 hours.

The first shooting left a juvenile male with multiple gunshot wounds along the Greenbelt Road corridor in Seabrook. The 15 long-gun casings recovered at the scene set this incident apart from the typical forensic signature of street-level youth violence in the county, where handguns have historically dominated gun arrest data. Rifle-caliber weapons produce higher-velocity wounds and greater lethality, and their use in an incident involving a juvenile on a public road is a detail investigators have not yet addressed publicly.

Hours later, a teenage girl was shot on Central Avenue near Capitol Heights, the commercial corridor cutting through one of the county's most densely populated inner-beltway communities. Prince George's County Police confirmed both shootings are under investigation and said no suspects have been taken into custody in either case.

The back-to-back incidents land against a county backdrop defined by accelerating youth gun violence. Prince George's had the second-highest number of firearm-related deaths in Maryland between January 2015 and September 2025, according to a state dashboard. Between fiscal years 2020 and 2023, handgun violations among individuals under 18 in the county increased by 220 percent, and carjackings rose by 85.4 percent, according to the county's Gun Violence Study Workgroup final report submitted in July 2025. The Seabrook scene, with its long-gun casing count, suggests the weapons picture may be shifting further still.

The Capitol Heights shooting falls within a geographic zone the workgroup flagged as a clustering corridor for youth-involved gun incidents, concentrated along the Central Avenue strip and the neighborhoods north toward Seat Pleasant. Whether the two overnight incidents share any connection, investigative lead, or witness pool is something PGPD has not disclosed.

The county council's Gun Violence Study Workgroup, co-chaired by District 7 council member Krystal Oriadha, submitted final recommendations calling for trauma recovery centers in high-incident neighborhoods and school-based conflict resolution programs. "We do taskforces and we do workgroups, but the most important thing is that we actualize them," Oriadha said. Those recommendations remain in implementation limbo nearly nine months later.

Anyone with information on either shooting is asked to contact the Prince George's County Police Department or submit an anonymous tip through Crime Solvers at pgcrimesolvers.com.

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