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Black Lives Matter activist MarShawn McCarrel fatally shoots self in front of Ohio Statehouse

 Black Lives Matter activist killed himself on the steps of the Ohio Statehouse, authorities said.



MarShawn McCarrel, 23, shot himself in front of the Columbus building Monday evening, Lt. Craig Cvetan of the State Highway Patrol told the Columbus Dispatch.
“My demons won today. I'm sorry,” the activist, who recently attended the NAACP Image Awards, posted on his Facebook page about 3 p.m., just hours before his body was found near the Statehouse.



VIA FACEBOOK

MarShawn McCarrel and mother Leatha Wellington attended the NAACP Image Awards last week.

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The Ohio activist worked with Black Lives Matter.VIA FACEBOOK

The Ohio activist worked with Black Lives Matter.

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His last tweet read: “Let the record show that I pissed on the state house before I left.”
No one witnessed the shooting, Cvetan said. McCarrel was pronounced dead at the scene.
McCarrel, who had recently worked with Black Lives Matter, helped organize protests in Ohio after a Missouri cop shot and killed unarmed black teenager Michael Brown in 2014.



MarShawn McCarrel, 23, committed suicide on the steps of Ohio's Statehouse Monday, authorities said.VIA FACEBOOK

MarShawn McCarrel, 23, committed suicide on the steps of Ohio's Statehouse Monday, authorities said.

He also founded youth mentorship program Pursuing Our Dreams, which launched Feed the Streets, a project to help Ohio's homeless.
He attended the NAACP’s Image Awards on Friday, Pursuing Our Dreams wrote on its Facebook.
The 23-year-old community organizer was named one of Radio One’s Hometown Champions, an award for community activists and volunteers, earlier this year and earned a trip to the California awards show. He took his mom to the Friday night ceremony.



FBMD01000a9c0d00004b61000004a7000075ab00001bb100009cda0000b64a0100d4620100597201007f810100f5920200VIA FACEBOOK

'My demons won today,' the 23-year-old posted on Facebook Monday.

"He is selfless and will give his last in order to make sure others don't go without,” read a nomination page for the Hometown Champions Award. “MarShawn has come so far in life and has inspired so many people to help others”
McCarrel was homeless for three months after he graduated from high school — an experience that inspired him to help others, according to his nomination.        
“When MarShawn got back on his feet, he felt the need to give back because so many people helped him when he was down,” it read. “MarShawn stresses the importance of having conversations with the people we feed because they'll get hungry in 2 hours but a good conversation will carry them over for a lifetime.”    
“All everyone needs is love,” he told 614 Columbus in 2014, referring to his work with the Feed the Streets. “That’s a human being. That’s a pulse. We’re feeding everyone, we’re sending the message — today I got you; tomorrow, I could be right there.”