Family and friends remember teens killed in violent crash at car meet-up

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Sunday, February 28, 2021
Vigil set for Saturday for teens killed in car meet-up crash
DeCarerick "DoBaby" Kennedy, 15, and his brother, Faybian "FayFay" Hoisington, 14, were two of the victims in last Sunday's crash.

HOUSTON, Texas (KTRK) -- Family and friends gathered at a vigil to honor the lives of two teens killed in a crash after a car 'meet-up' in Brookshire.

DeCarerick "DoBaby" Kennedy, 16, and Faybian "FayFay" Hoisington, 14, suffered fatal injuries when a speeding car hit another car that crashed into pedestrians on the side of the road.

The candlelight vigil was held at Falcon Stadium, 34599 Royal Road in Brookshire.

Attendees wore the teens' favorite colors, red and black, to the event.

A GoFundMe account has been set up to help with funeral expenses for the boys.

In lieu of flowers, the family requested that monetary gifts be donated to help with the unexpected expenses for the family and their siblings.

Funeral and burial arrangements are pending.

DeCarerick and another onlooker, Roger Glover, 35, died on Sunday, Feb. 21. Faybian died Monday.

According to the boys' mom, Sherkeitha Kennedy, they loved looking at modified cars, but she never thought it could turn dangerous.

"This must stop. They were just bystanders," said Kennedy from the front of her home church, St. Paul Missionary Baptist Church, in Brookshire. "My heart is broken. It's broken in so many pieces. So many."

The teens were less than a block away from their grandmother's apartment, where they were spending the night. The Humble ISD students were inseparable.

"They were good students, good grades. They were active in sports. Their favorite thing, they loved to do, was go out with their daddy to fish," said Kennedy.

On Monday night, the 22-year-old man accused of causing a crash appeared in court where a judge ordered him not to drive, for the safety of the community.

Authorities say Andrew Mock was in a yellow Camaro doing a "flyby" at 100 mph on the feeder road of Highway 290 when the crash happened.

"The defendant [Mock] had been doing donuts in a parking lot and then told his passenger he was going to make a 'pull,' meaning accelerate the vehicle as quickly as possible. He got to 80 to 100 plus miles per hour on the feeder, rear-ending another vehicle, which collided with three pedestrians," prosecutors read in court.

WATCH: Suspect in deadly car meet crash ordered not to drive

This is what we learned in court about the suspect charged in a deadly car meet in northwest Harris County.

"You're going to have to find a way to get work because you're not going to drive, you understand? And there are no exceptions. This is effective immediately and is in place until your cases are all over," the judge told Mock.

Authorities have said reckless and dangerous driving is a big problem in the Houston area. The teens' mother, who said she wants justice for her sons, knows all too well.

"Stop it. Crackdown. It has to be stopped because just like it happened to my sons, it can happen to anybody else," she said.

Mock is charged with two counts of manslaughter and aggravated assault-serious bodily injury, which could be upgraded. He was not hurt but his passenger suffered minor injuries.

His bond was set at $80,000.

ORIGINAL STORY: Video shows sports car moments before car meet crash that killed 2 spectators along US 290

A video is offering a glimpse at the moment a vehicle involved in a crash that killed two people at a car meet sped down a feeder road.

SEE ALSO: 30-year-old man charged in street racing crash that killed innocent driver

Street racers were going in excess of 100 mph when the crash happened, according to the Harris County District Attorney's Office.

2 trucks racing on Christmas morning crash and fall into SE Houston bayou, killing 1

Press play to watch video from the scene.

Street racers get away after causing crash that sent truck flying off I-45

The truck, which had a baby inside, dropped at least 15 feet to the feeder below in a crash police blame on street racers.

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