Patricia Shepard was 50 years old.

She wasn’t famous. She wasn’t involved in gangs. She wasn’t connected to crime. She was simply a hardworking woman trying to make it through another day.

Every evening, Patricia reported to work at Wayne-Sanderson Farms in Hammond, Louisiana. Because she didn’t own a vehicle, she depended on coworkers for transportation. It was a routine she had followed for years. Work. Ride home. Spend time with family. Repeat.

Nothing about June 4th, 2026, was supposed to be different.

But according to investigators, somewhere in Hammond, armed men were already watching and waiting.

Authorities believe the suspects had their eyes on a specific vehicle. They allegedly believed someone inside that car was their target. They followed it through the night, convinced they knew exactly who they were hunting.

What they didn’t know was that their intended target had already exited the vehicle.

Patricia Shepard got in.

Shortly after 1:15 a.m., the vehicle stopped at a Chevron gas station on Highway 190. It should have been an ordinary stop before heading home.

Instead, it became the scene of a nightmare.

Investigators say multiple gunmen opened fire on the vehicle. Witnesses described a barrage of gunfire that shattered the silence of the early morning hours. Authorities later estimated that between 70 and 80 rounds were fired.

When the shooting ended, Patricia Shepard was dead.

The woman sitting in the car was not the person investigators believe the shooters intended to find.

She was simply in the wrong place at the wrong time.

As news of her death spread, family members struggled to understand how such a tragedy could happen.

Her sister, Annette Smith, described Patricia as a quiet and caring woman whose life revolved around faith, family and helping others. She loved reading her Bible every day. In fact, her family says she read it so often that the cover eventually wore completely away.

Those who knew her say she regularly donated to charitable causes despite never having much money herself. She wasn’t the type of person who sought attention. She simply tried to do good wherever she could.

Now, the people who loved her are left with questions that may never fully be answered.

How could someone so innocent become the victim of such extreme violence?

Why did a woman whose only goal that night was getting home from work end up caught in the middle of a deadly attack?

For investigators, the search continues.

For Patricia’s family, however, the reality is already permanent.

A sister is gone.

A loved one is gone.

A faithful woman who spent her life helping others never made it home.

And in a tragedy authorities believe may have started with a case of mistaken identity, it was Patricia Shepard who ultimately paid the highest price.