Itโ€™s been three years since 19-year-old Jaโ€™Leel Stephens died, but Christina Cromartie has no doubt her sonโ€™s spirit can still be felt in Fayetteville. 

Heโ€™s there each time her group of 23 kickball players, ages ranging from 10 to 19, gather at J.S. Spivey Recreation Center to practice for a game. Heโ€™s there when she gets a new idea for how she can help the community she loves. Heโ€™s there when she hears about the impact her kickball team has had and feels warm all over.

Most importantly, heโ€™s there at the center of it all through the Jaโ€™Leel Stephens Heals program, the nonprofit Cromartie put together in 2022 that she hopes will one day provide educational opportunities, housing and nutrition for at-risk youth in Cumberland County.ย 

The program began with a grassroots kickball team in 2018, several years before Jaโ€™Leelโ€™s death. Throughout that summer, Cromartie said she saw firsthand the impact something so simple could have on issues so complex. Teenagers struggling with family troubles, the structural issues associated with committing a crime, and a host of other problems found solace in the kickball field. Cromartie paid out of her own pocket to supply snacks at games, and Jaโ€™Leel and his sister Jahnice served as team captains. 

But the team fell apart, Cromartie said. She couldnโ€™t keep funding it by herself, and team membersโ€™ parents didnโ€™t provide the support sheโ€™d hoped for. The Covid-19 pandemic in 2020 further prevented getting a team back together. 

In the weeks before Jaโ€™Leelโ€™s death, Cromartie and her only son had discussed bringing back the team. They felt it could have a real impact on the community, especially in a county where gun violence among teens had become an increasingly prevalent issue.ย 

Then, on June 10, 2021, Jaโ€™Leel and his cousin were killed on his 19th birthday on a trip to Myrtle Beach, and Cromartieโ€™s world stopped. 

Navigating grief

The loss of her first child shattered Cromartie, who was still struggling with the recent death of her mother. For almost two years, she sought justice for her son in South Carolinaโ€™s legal system, only for a judge to dismiss murder charges against the shooter in April 2023 after a โ€œStand Your Groundโ€ hearing. Court documents stated that Jaโ€™Leel was shot after his cousin allegedly held the shooterโ€™s friend at gunpoint and Jaโ€™Leel allegedly began to hit the man, WMBF News reported.ย 

Cromartie was devastated by the thought that she wouldnโ€™t get justice for her son.

โ€œI think about it every day. โ€˜He didnโ€™t get justice. He didnโ€™t get justice.โ€™ OK, โ€˜what are you going to do?โ€™โ€ she said. โ€œThatโ€™s what I had asked myself.โ€ 

Determined to turn her grief into something positive, Cromartie decided to bring renewed life to her two nonprofits โ€” the kickball team, now named the Jaโ€™Leel Stephens Heals Program, and CarolRellโ€™s Battered Center, a shelter for those experiencing domestic violence named after Cromartieโ€™s late mother and brother. The shelter initially opened in 2017, but Cromartie was forced to temporarily close it after a dispute with a landlord led to her losing the Hay Street building in 2022, she said.

This spring, she sat down with Jahnice, her 18-year-old eldest daughter, and several kids they knew. 

โ€œWe talked about it and we said, โ€˜Itโ€™s time,โ€™โ€ Cromartie said. โ€œThey used kickball for an outlet in 2018, and we noticed that they still use it for an outlet. No matter what they go through, they take the anger out on the field.โ€

The team had its first practice last month.

A scene from the Ja’Leel Stephens Heals kickball team’s game against the Fayetteville Police Department on May 25, 2024. Cromartie’s team beat the police department 15-3, she said. Credit: Courtesy of Christina Cromartie

โ€˜Itโ€™s going to help the worldโ€™

Kanon Atkins, 19, is one of the kickball teamโ€™s captains. He said heโ€™s used the team as a distraction from his problems, and he knows of two friends who have gotten jobs and another friend who is working to go back to school after joining the team. 

โ€œIโ€™ll go out there and put it on the field,โ€ Atkins told CityView.

Jahnice Cromartie, Jaโ€™Leelโ€™s younger sister, said the teamโ€™s rebirth has helped her cope with her grief. 

โ€œI feel like it helps me mentally and emotionally,โ€ she said. โ€œIt helps me with my anger.โ€

And every day, Cromartie said, she sees proof that the program is needed. She recounted a recent incident where two players got into an argument, ending with one player pulling a gun on the other. 

โ€œWe had to separate them and we had to remove both of them off the property,โ€ she said. โ€œBut they both wanted to play so bad, they contacted me.โ€ 

She brought the involved playersโ€™ families together and is working to educate the players on why violence is not the answer, Cromartie said. 

โ€œThatโ€™s what these young kids are doing, and thereโ€™s no guidance out here to โ€˜put it down, letโ€™s solve this another way,โ€™โ€ she said. 

The boys told her they wanted to do better out of respect for Jaโ€™Leel, something that deeply moved her. 

โ€œItโ€™s not really just kickball,โ€ she said. โ€œItโ€™s more than that.โ€

And Cromartie is working to prove that to the players on the team. After overhearing a negative conversation about the police during a practice, she reached out to the Fayetteville Police Department to ask them to play against her team, hoping the interaction would improve their perception of law enforcement. It was an immediate โ€œyesโ€ from the department, and Cromartieโ€™s team beat the officers 15-3 on May 25 after seven days straight of practice, she said.

โ€œTheyโ€™re still talking about it,โ€ Cromartie said, beaming. โ€œThey want to sit down and have a talk, so Iโ€™m going to set that up โ€ฆ It gave them a different outlook.โ€

Through this work, she said, she knows she can make a difference, for both her family and others.

โ€œIt helps my children, and in the process, itโ€™s going to help the world,โ€ Cromartie said. โ€œWeโ€™re going to save a life one person at a time the best way we can.โ€

How to help

To fully realize her vision, Cromartie said, she needs as much help from the community as she can get. Her wishlist includes: 

  • A building to host CarolRellโ€™s Battered Center in one half and the Jaโ€™Leel Stephens Heals program hub for youth in the other
  • Cleats for the kickball team
  • Money to purchase necessary supplies
  • Partnerships with other local organizations like peer support groups

The players have asked to go on a trip to the beach, she said, something she hopes to be able to do for them soon.

โ€œThatโ€™s why Iโ€™m going to keep going and going and going,โ€ she said. โ€œA door is going to open somewhere.โ€

If nothing else, Cromartie said, she knows her program is keeping young people off the streets. 

โ€œIโ€™m willing to sacrifice everything in me for them, because if they want to stay out there, if at 9 oโ€™clock thereโ€™s a friend calling and saying, โ€˜Hey, letโ€™s go stick up a storeโ€™ or something, guess where theyโ€™re at?โ€ she said. โ€œTheyโ€™re on the field. [We] donโ€™t have to worry about them. They are in a safe place.โ€ 

And when that safe place goes away, the community sees the consequences, Cromartie said. A participant in the 2018 kickball team recently received two life sentences in prison, she said. 

โ€œJust imagine if we had a building then. If we wouldโ€™ve kept going, if weโ€™d had the right support from the community, he probably would still be here,โ€ she said. โ€œMy son would probably still be here. A lot of teens would still be here.โ€

But rather than dwelling on the past, Cromartie is intent on building a better future for Fayetteville teens through her programs, one game at a time. The Jaโ€™Leel Stephens Heals team is set to play local probation officers at 4 p.m. June 22, she said, grinning. 

โ€œ[Jaโ€™Leel] knowing that theyโ€™re playing these games and theyโ€™re getting healed, that lets me know heโ€™s here,โ€ Cromartie said. โ€œHis spirit will forever linger on, and weโ€™re going to forever say his name.โ€

Reporter Lexi Solomon can be reached at lsolomon@cityviewnc.com or 910-423-6500.

This story was made possible by contributions to CityView News Fund, a 501c3 charitable organization committed to an informed democracy.

Lexi Solomon is a government accountability reporter at CityView, focusing on the Cumberland County Board of Commissioners and the school board. She grew up in Williamsburg, Virginia, and received degrees in Russian and National Security & Foreign Affairs in 2022 from Virginia Tech. Before joining CityView, she worked at The Fayetteville Observer as a crime reporter and government watchdog reporter. She enjoys hiking, reading and traveling in her free time.