A neighborhood in Flint was left shattered after an overnight shooting turned a family home into the center of one of the city’s most heartbreaking cases.

In the early morning hours of May 8, gunfire erupted on Altoona Street.

Investigators later said more than 230 rounds were fired toward a house where multiple family members, including children, were inside.

Upstairs, nine-year-old Tyhari Trinity Knox was sleeping beside her sister.

Neither child knew danger was seconds away.

Bullets tore through walls, windows, and rooms.

The home became chaos.

Family members rushed to help.

Emergency crews responded.

Tyhari was transported to hospital.

Doctors tried to save her.

She did not survive.

Her 12-year-old sister, Allyson, suffered critical injuries.

The loss immediately sent shockwaves through Flint.

Neighbors described hearing what sounded endless.

Not a few shots.

Not a brief burst.

But a wave of gunfire that seemed to go on and on.

When daylight arrived, the scene told the story.

Damaged walls.

Broken glass.

Evidence markers.

A home where children had gone to sleep only hours earlier.

Investigators believe the shooting may not have been intended for Tyhari.

Authorities reportedly suspect someone else inside the residence may have been the target.

But for loved ones, that detail changes nothing.

A child is gone.

A sister is fighting to recover.

A family is trying to understand how a bedroom became a crime scene.

Community members have since gathered in support.

Vigils.

Prayers.

Flowers.

Stuffed animals.

Messages written for a little girl many never met.

People across Flint have repeated the same question:

How does this happen?

Tyhari’s name has now become part of larger conversations about violence affecting neighborhoods and the children caught in between.

Advocates say the tragedy shows the human cost of retaliatory shootings and reckless violence.

Because even when someone else is the target—

Families pay.

Children pay.

Entire communities pay.

Friends remembered Tyhari as bright and full of life.

Someone who should have been thinking about school, games, birthdays, and summer.

Not becoming the center of a homicide investigation.

Police continue working the case while asking the public for information.

Meanwhile, the Knox family faces a reality no parent should ever know.

One bedroom remains empty.

One child is missing.

And a city keeps repeating the name of a nine-year-old girl who should still be here.

Tyhari Trinity Knox was only nine years old.

For Flint, she became more than a headline.

She became a reminder of what violence takes away.