The unimaginable grief surrounding the death of seven-month-old Kaori Patterson-Moore grew even heavier as her father, Jamari Patterson, shared his pain publicly for the first time. In a moving letter released amid community vigils, Patterson opened up about the daughter he called one of his greatest achievements and the future he desperately wanted to build for her and her two-year-old brother.

“I wanted to spend my entire life being her father,” he wrote. “I want my baby back.” Patterson described how Kaori’s birth inspired him to turn his life around, committing to being the stable, loving dad his children deserved. He recalled the pure joy of holding her in his arms for the first time — a moment he believed marked the beginning of a lifetime of memories that would never come.

That dream ended violently on April 1 in East Williamsburg. Kaori was sitting in her stroller, pushed by her mother near Humboldt and Moore streets, when gunfire erupted from a moped speeding the wrong way down the street. Surveillance footage captured the terrifying scene: the passenger firing multiple shots toward a group on the corner, the innocent family caught in the crossfire, and the moped crashing shortly afterward.

Alleged shooter Amuri Greene, 21, was arrested at the scene. In a recorded statement to detectives, Greene confessed that he had been aiming at Kaori’s father, stating Jamari Patterson “was the defendant’s intended target.” Authorities believe the shooting was a botched gang-related retaliation, with Patterson allegedly connected to the Money Over Everything gang. Greene faces three counts of murder, attempted murder, weapons charges, and assault. He has pleaded not guilty.

The second suspect, 18-year-old Matthew Rodriguez, who allegedly drove the moped, fled but was tracked down and arrested in Pennsylvania. He awaits extradition back to New York.

Kaori’s mother has strongly pushed back against any claims linking her family to gang activity, insisting their baby had no connection to the street conflicts. The family’s sorrow is compounded by the shooter’s admission, which turned a routine afternoon stroll into a nightmare.

Other relatives have shared intimate memories that make the loss feel even sharper. One grandmother, who asked not to be identified, said through tears that Kaori was “just starting to call me mom” and “just starting to take her first steps.” She was close with the entire family, including nephews and uncles.

Linda Oyinkonyan, Kaori’s maternal grandmother and a pastor with her husband, spoke of the family’s profound heartbreak: “Broken. Heartbroken. Horrified. It’s bad, it’s sad, it’s sorrowful, it’s hurtful… it’s nothing you can imagine, the deep hurt.” Oyinkonyan, who saw Kaori just one day before the shooting and later collapsed at her job as a 3-K teacher upon hearing the news, emphasized their faith. “Violence, revenge, that’s not what we do here. We pray. We forgive them. We’re praying that they get saved. And God just have mercy on them.”

The Brooklyn community has rallied in mourning. Vigils organized by local clergy have drawn hundreds, with flowers, balloons, teddy bears, and candles creating a growing memorial at the corner where Kaori’s life ended. Congresswoman Nydia Velazquez and other leaders have spoken at the gatherings, calling for an end to the gun violence tearing through neighborhoods.

Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch described the incident as a tragedy that shocks the conscience, while Mayor Zohran Mamdani has echoed demands for accountability and safer streets. Kaori’s two-year-old brother was grazed by the gunfire and is recovering physically, but the emotional scars for the entire family run deep.

Advocates are renewing calls for youth intervention programs, conflict resolution initiatives, and stricter enforcement against illegal firearms in high-risk areas. The swift cross-state arrests highlight law enforcement coordination, yet they cannot heal the void left in one family.

Patterson’s letter reveals the quiet determination many parents feel after welcoming a child. After Kaori’s birth, he resolved to change for the better, wanting to provide the love and stability she and her brother needed. Those plans were shattered in seconds. Now he faces the devastating reality of planning a funeral instead of watching his daughter grow.

Kaori was remembered by loved ones as a joyful, intelligent “little baby angel” who was always giggling and full of life. Her short seven months brought light to everyone around her. The milestones she will never reach — more wobbly steps turning into confident walks, more sweet “mama” calls, endless giggles filling the home — leave an aching emptiness.

As legal proceedings move forward, support has flooded in from across New York City and beyond. Donations are assisting with funeral costs, while messages of love and strength continue to pour in on social media. Many in the community hope Kaori’s story becomes more than another tragic headline — a catalyst for real change so no other father has to write the words Jamari Patterson shared with the world.

In the face of such loss, the family’s grace stands out. Choosing forgiveness and prayer even while demanding justice offers a powerful message amid the rage that claimed an innocent life. Yet for Patterson, the pain remains raw. He wanted nothing more than to spend his entire life being Kaori’s father — to protect her, guide her, and watch her become everything she was meant to be.

That opportunity was stolen by a stray bullet in a dispute that had nothing to do with her. Kaori Patterson-Moore’s bright spirit may be gone, but the love she inspired and the questions her death raises will linger in Brooklyn and far beyond.