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1994
“Robert is a child growing up without any encouragement and support. He is lonely and feels poorly about himself. He has a sense of failure that has infiltrated almost every aspect of his inner self. He is caught up in a never-ending cycle of emotional overload and acting out. His anger is so great that his perception of the world is grossly distorted and inaccurate.”
Yummy was what neighbors in the community called a “terror.” He picked fights with other kids and stole from local convenience stores. Yummy was also part of the 8-ball faction of the Black Disciples. Yummy felt solace with the gang members; they made him feel like someone cared. They took the boy on as a shorty, the lowest ranking member of the gang.
Yummy Joins the Black Disciples Street Gang
Yummy was 9 or 10 years old when he joined the gang. He had “BDN III” (Black Disciples Nation) tattooed on his right forearm. By age 11, Yummy’s rap sheet included charges for theft, arson, and even armed robbery.
On August 28, 1994, gang leaders tasked Yummy with the job of shooting rivals.
The violent spiral that defined Robert "Yummy" Sandifer's last hours began late on a Sunday in August of 1994, when Chicago police officer William Callahan knelt over a 16-year-old shooting victim near 108th Street and Perry Avenue.
The victim, Kianta Britten, was bleeding from the abdomen and moaning as Callahan leaned down.
Police responded to a call of shots fired on the South-side that evening. They found a 16-year-old boy bleeding near 108th Street. The officer asked the young man, “Who shot you,?” He answered, ‘Yummy shot me. I think his name is Robert.’
The officer received a phone call about this time. Another shooting, less than a block from where the 16-year-old was found. Two teens, 14-year-old Shavon Dean was dead and a 17-year-old boy seriously injured. The boy told police Yummy shot them both.
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