Miami

Jarvis Brownlee, wounded in Miami shooting as child, inspired before NFL draft


AVENTURA — Jarvis Brownlee has gone through hardships and tragedy growing up in South Florida. But it has all shaped his character as an NFL draft prospect preparing for the scouting combine next week in Indianapolis.

When Brownlee, a Miami Carol City High grad who goes into the draft as a Louisville cornerback that started his college career at Florida State, was in third grade, he was shot in the foot. He was in the passenger seat of a vehicle where the driver, a friend of his father, was the target.

The shooting occurred at a Burger King drive-thru in the Opa-locka neighborhood of northwest Miami-Dade County, where Brownlee’s from.

Training for the draft back in South Florida this week, at Bommarito Performance Systems, after doing prior combine prep in Pensacola, Brownlee detailed to the South Florida Sun Sentinel the horror of being stuck inside a car that had 10 bullet holes on the passenger side and three on the driver’s side, according to what he recalls from detectives.

“I kind of witnessed everything,” Brownlee recounted of leaving his aunt’s home with father’s friend as they set out to get food. “I saw when we were in the car and they followed us to Burger King. As a child, you don’t know no better. You’re not thinking of that.”

He remembers pulling out of a parking lot, looking in the rearview and seeing a car’s lights flicker on.

“As we started driving, they started driving,” he said.

They got to the drive-thru, paid for the order and the shooting started as the driver was grabbing for the food at the window. Brownlee believes the car that followed them was behind them in the drive-thru and a shooter exited that vehicle to walk up to their car from behind on his side.

“My instinct was to drop to the floor,” he said. “I think the guy I was with didn’t realize that he was hit. So I end up telling him, ‘You shot! You shot!’ I just saw blood spitting everywhere.”

The driver took off frantically to find the nearest hospital, running red lights and all. Brownlee remembers arriving at a hospital but not finding any attendants when they entered screaming for help. They split up as he went deeper into the building to find someone, exited the facility when that was unsuccessful, didn’t initially see the car where they first left it but ran to the right and found it surrounded by police.

Officers checked both the driver and a young Brownlee to determine the medical attention they required, but Brownlee grew up fearful of hospitals, a result of seeing the aftermath of his father shot multiple times. So he hid the hole on the bottom of his right shoe, concealing where a bullet grazed him near his heel.

“I knew my dad was in the streets,” said Brownlee, adding he believes the shooter mistook the driver for his father. He said his father is incarcerated and set to be released December 2025.

“As a kid, I saw my dad shot a lot. So, from there, I ain’t like the hospital. I used to hate it. … I didn’t want anything to do with it, so I end up hiding my foot, hiding where the hole was.”



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