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How Lil Wayne survived shooting himself at age 12

Robert Hoobler, a former New Orleans Police officer, stands in front of the apartment where Grammy-winning musician Lil Wayne once lived in the Hollygrove area of New Orleans. It is the same home where Hoobler carried out a bloodied Lil Wayne after he was shot when he was 12 years old. Hoobler saved Lil Waynes life by driving him to a nearby hospital.

Robert Hoobler, a former New Orleans Police officer, stands in front of the apartment where Grammy-winning musician Lil' Wayne once lived in the Hollygrove area of New Orleans. It is the same home where Hoobler carried out a bloodied Lil' Wayne after he was shot when he was 12 years old. Hoobler saved Lil' Wayne's life by driving him to a nearby hospital.


This story is crazy… It’s how Lil Wayne shot himself in the chest and almost died when he was only 12. Check it:
The celebrated New Orleans rapper would have bled to death on the floor of his mother’s Hollygrove apartment the afternoon of Nov. 11, 1994, at just 12 years old, after accidentally shooting himself in the chest while playing with a 9 mm handgun.


If not for Hoobler, the New Orleans police officer who cradled the bleeding boy in the back of a squad car that day on the way to the hospital, the Grammy-winning superstar would never have made the cover of the current issue of Rolling Stone.

The shooting, part of the Lil Wayne lore, has been chronicled before, but not its details, nor the tale of the man who saved his life: a 6-foot, 7-inch, 330-pound officer who responded to the shooting while off-duty, as was his habit.

That nearly fatal day, according to police records, 12-year-old Dwayne Carter Jr. left school early because it was report card day. He bought a hamburger, fries and soft drink from Burger King on his way home to 3409 Monroe St., Apartment D. He sat on the mattress in the master bedroom and began eating. But he stopped when he noticed a blue-steel Taurus 9 mm handgun.

The pistol had been left there the previous day, by a man who came over to watch a football game.

Little Dwayne picked up the gun and began horsing around with it in front of a stereo blaring music. At about 1:15 p.m., the boy accidentally fired a bullet through his chest. The slug then shot out the lower left corner of a window.

Somehow, it missed every vital organ. But the boy was dying.

Dwayne dialed 911, wheezing as he spoke. As blood poured out of the wound and formed a puddle near the stereo, the operator pressed for details. “You will find out when you get here, ” the boy said, according to the police report.

He crawled toward the front door, smearing a trail of blood behind him. He lay on the floor face down, pressing his right cheek to the ground, and waited.

Faint cry for help

Officer Robert Hoobler was on his way to an off-duty detail when dispatchers broadcast the emergency call.

Hoobler, who joined the New Orleans Police Department in 1988, regularly showed up at emergency scenes when he wasn’t working. Police work has been his passion since he joined the Air Force Military Police after graduating from high school in 1974.

Hearing the call, Hoobler, then 41, drove his squad car to the two-story four-plex, arriving at the same time as fellow officer Arthur Thompson.

The officers entered the complex and went upstairs. They knocked on the door of Apartment D.

“Police!”

No answer.

They could hear music. They knocked again.

“Police!”

Still, no answer. They tried the door, but it was locked.

As they stood in the hallway, Pamela Taylor, a woman living in Apartment C, walked up. The officers asked her who her neighbors were.

They just moved in, and she hardly knew them, she said. Taylor told them the maintenance man, who lived five blocks away, might help.

Thompson headed to the maintenance man’s house but found no one. Meanwhile, Hoobler went downstairs and paced around the apartment complex. Nothing seemed out of the ordinary. Confused, he went back upstairs and knocked on the door of Apartment D one last time.

“Police!”

This time, a faint voice answered.

“Help me! I’ve been shot! Help me! I’ve been shot!” Hoobler said he heard.

Hoobler kicked down the door.

He found a short-haired boy in jeans and a T-shirt, bleeding to death.

Hoobler radioed emergency medical services for help. As he awaited a reply, he spoke to the boy: “Talk to me, man. What happened to you? Stay awake.”

The boy just groaned.

Moments later, Thompson came in to the apartment. Hoobler searched the apartment for a gunman or a witness. He found the pistol at the foot of the bed. He noticed a shell on the bedspread, near the half-eaten hamburger.

Meanwhile, Thompson kneeled next to little Dwayne, urging him to hang on, asking him what happened. The boy said he shot himself by accident.

Hoobler asked 911 dispatchers how long it would take for the ambulance to get there.

“No unit is available, ” the dispatcher said.

Speeding to hospital

As Hoobler made sense of the dispatcher’s grim words, officers Kevin Balancier, Gervais Allison, Steven Williams and then-Sgt. Timothy Bayard arrived.

Hoobler met Bayard downstairs and briefed him. Bayard climbed upstairs. He saw the blood-soaked boy and heard him wheezing.

Bayard radioed the dispatcher and asked when the ambulance would arrive.

“No unit is available, ” the dispatcher said. “We’ll send the first one that is free.”

Bayard looked at Hoobler.

“Take him to the hospital yourself, ” Bayard, now a captain, recalled saying. “Grab him and get the f – - – out of here.”

Balancier backed a police car into the driveway and opened the back door. Hoobler scooped the boy up and carried him to the back seat of Balancier’s car “like a little baby, ” Bayard said. Hoobler lay the boy across his lap.

One officer suggested Charity Hospital, but it was too far away. “Take him to Ochsner, ” in Jefferson Parish, Bayard said.

It wasn’t as well-equipped to handle gunshot wounds like Charity — but it was much closer.

Allison sped out in front of Balancier and blocked traffic at major intersections. As Dwayne groaned and bled all over Hoobler in the back seat, Balancier sped to Claiborne and turned right. The street led right to Ochsner’s emergency room, which had already been notified of the situation.

Hoobler spoke to Dwayne the entire trip and lightly shook him to keep him alert. “Stay awake, son. You’re going to be fine. You’ll see.”

When they got to Ochsner, Balancier opened the door and let Hoobler out. Hoobler placed Dwayne on a gurney. Nurses and doctors frantically wheeled him away.

Hoobler went to the bathroom to wash off what he could. Most of his shirt, except for the sleeves, was tinted dark red.

Hoobler, Bayard and the other officers reunited in the emergency room lobby. A nurse told the group of winded officers, “If y’all had waited for EMS or taken him to Charity, he would have died.

“You saved that kid’s life.”

‘I almost died’

Years passed, and Hoobler went on to spend 10 years as a homicide detective. He began seeing and hearing about an up-and-coming Cash Money Records rapper named Lil Wayne everywhere: record stores, magazine stands, television and radio stations.

Meanwhile, whenever his work took him to Hollygrove, he came across the boy who nearly died in his arms.

He didn’t realize the two were the same person until after the rapper had hit it big.

One night, as Hoobler dined at a restaurant on St. Charles Avenue with a friend, a large man tapped him on the shoulder and told him, “Lil Wayne wants to see you.”

Hoobler cast a puzzled glance around the room and locked eyes with a man sporting wild dreadlocks and shiny chains. The man motioned him over. Hoobler didn’t recognize him until he stood over the table.

“This man saved my life, ” Lil Wayne said to several men and women around him, according to Hoobler. “I almost died, and this man saved my life. I’ll never forget him.”

He reached out and bumped Hoobler’s fist. They spoke briefly before they each returned to their meals.

Hoobler finished eating. When he went to pay for his meal, the waiter told him not to worry about it. Lil Wayne had picked up the tab.

Rock, not rap

Hoobler, who was born and raised in Gentilly and attended John F. Kennedy High School, left the NOPD after Hurricane Katrina. His home took on nearly 12 feet of water, he said, and his wife nearly drowned on her quest to safety.

After the couple was separated for five days in the flood’s aftermath, his wife convinced him to move to a small town in northern Mississippi. He got a job at a small police department, but became homesick. Now he plans to move back home, and hopes to get on with a local police department.

Lil Wayne, meanwhile, has gone on to record half-a-dozen studio albums and 11 mix tapes, selling millions of copies of his work and appearing in dozens of music videos along the way. His “Tha Carter III” was the best-selling album of 2008. He won four Grammys earlier this year.

Lil Wayne, now 26, would likely not be alive, much less the world’s most celebrated rapper, without Hoobler’s efforts.

Still, the officer said, “I’m proud of what he’s done, but I would’ve done the same for the guy no one ever heard about again.” Everyone else there would have, too, he said.

Hoobler has never bought any of Lil Wayne’s CDs. He mostly listens to rock bands: AC/DC, Nickelback, Motley Crue, Ozzy Osbourne, Metallica.

Hoobler brightened when he learned Lil Wayne has recorded a rock album and will release it later this month. That, Hoobler said, he might buy.

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Discussion

21 comments for “How Lil Wayne survived shooting himself at age 12”

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  1. God bless this man,i am so grateful for his actions

    Posted by Marissa Williams | April 12, 2009, 12:40 pm
  2. damnnnnnnnnnnnnnn I respect this man Hoobler

    Posted by ant3 u^p | April 12, 2009, 3:00 pm
  3. i love lil wayne to death and can recite his lyrics from memory, but it is ironic that a police officer directly intervened to save his life considering how most rappers (including weezy, as many of his lyrics will support) feel about the police. that is to say, as it is with anything, there are good and bad [cops].

    Posted by drew robinson | April 12, 2009, 8:45 pm
  4. People like this man, Hobbler, are truely what keeps the world going around. God Bless Hobbler and all the people in the world that would dedicate their lives to sacing others, our just by showing simple generous acts of kindness everday, just simple things. If everyone in the world did small acts of kindness to each other, the world would be a great place. Try to do something for someone everyday! Keep rockin Lil Wayne! And Hobbler you Rock! Keep uo the good work! =)

    Posted by Morgan | April 12, 2009, 8:57 pm
  5. God bless this man, he saved a Legend

    Posted by Airyn | April 13, 2009, 9:06 am
  6. datz watz up! weezy was blessed dat daii….god knew dat he had a talent and iit wasnt hiiz tyme ta go yet….so dat was god’s work!

    Posted by LilWayneJr1990 | April 13, 2009, 11:47 am
  7. GOD BLESS HOBBLER IF IT WERENT FOR HIS ACTIONS THERE WOULDNT BE A LIL WAYNE TODAY..

    Posted by Weezy | April 13, 2009, 11:48 am
  8. if it wasn’t for Hobbler then probably i wouldn’t be thankful for Mr. Carter.

    Posted by albert pajotte | April 13, 2009, 7:37 pm
  9. So Weezy never got shot in a gang fight he got shot for being curious…Intresting he’d rap like thats hard..

    Posted by WeezySaidWut? | April 13, 2009, 7:54 pm
  10. this is sad but a good story I understand it more now but I thank that police officer plus he aint makin no big deal that he saved lil wayne’s life and bein all cocky wit it kinda crazy how he never bought not 1 of his albums either but he is a good man and he could have just left him in the apartment but he decided to take him hisself there are really good people never the less cops out there

    Posted by Ti Ti | April 14, 2009, 10:56 am
  11. so weeezy’s love 4 de trigger began at such a tender age.Thank GOD he was saved cos we would have had THE BEST RAPPER DEAD.Weeezy i love ur rapping style,skill and ability.Dats why u are a blood gangstar.

    Posted by kutse robert | April 17, 2009, 4:16 pm
  12. i like seeing u spin money like u were born with it.ur style of hiphop kills me but i can’t afford 2 die cos ………………..

    Posted by kutse robert | April 17, 2009, 4:23 pm
  13. noW iM thinkinG ..iF hoobleR mainly likES rocK anD haS nevER ..bought wayneS recoRds
    iS that y lil WaynE aiming to makE a rocK album oR sOng..sO thE maN that saved hiS life could havE something to chariSh..who knowS he might makE a wholE RocK album anD dedicated to hoobler ..will thiS b a thank you ..from lil wayne. i think he deserveS that
    he should also makE a song about that very day….

    Posted by acid | April 20, 2009, 3:58 am
  14. Damn that Hoobler!
    He should have let him die, lil wayne is ruining rap/hip hop! D:

    He’s so terrible…

    Posted by Phlabfinagin | September 3, 2009, 9:01 pm
  15. OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO IF HE DIED DRAKE WOULDNT BE HIMSELF

    Posted by TANZI | September 12, 2009, 2:16 pm
  16. sorry about what happen when you where 12 years old but i love your music you r all i lesten to now these days your the best rapper alive

    Posted by justin kast | October 14, 2009, 2:36 pm
  17. God bless hoobler because wayne is the reason i picked up a pen and pad

    Posted by davon | November 4, 2009, 9:12 pm
  18. thank u jesus 4 hoobler… if lil wayne died ware wood drake be… think about it… but lil wayne go hard

    Posted by shaleasia | November 27, 2009, 4:56 pm
  19. damn man… thank god for hobbler..damn without u wezzy there wouldnt of been no cash money records.. u the best rapper in tha world…wezzyfbabayy

    Posted by jay sean | November 30, 2009, 4:21 pm
  20. Its really hard to express how I feel about this I feel WAY more than just happy that he survived and sad and sorry that happened! God bless you Hoobler without ya the best rapper alive would not be makin music nor would nicki minaj or drake and other young money artists!

    Posted by Jenna | March 21, 2010, 12:26 pm
  21. Lil Wayne ,
    If he would of died …. I would be nothing …. at all

    Posted by danessa brown | September 6, 2011, 2:51 pm

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