This has really become a bad area. I own a house down here and that power line right away or the access road is full of needles and prophylastics and one another. And we just don't get enough police out here. Today there were lots of police in the neighborhood but not for the reason the residents would have hoped for. And tonight, Narissa, police say they still have not made any arrests. So we can assume that police are going to intensify their search until they find the people who did this. Stacey Sakamoto with our live report. Thanks Stacey. Today's murders add three more names to the long list of victims of crime. This week is set aside to remember all of those victims. National Crime Victims' Rights Week. And during the week, those who have lost loved ones will be asking for changes. In Tacoma, candles and signs calling on elected officials to do more to stem crime. The organizer's son was molested and sexually mutilated. Tonight is our night to kind of remember those past victimizations and to draw strength from each other. Earlier in the day in Seattle's Peace Park, a new life was added to the grounds, a tree. A symbol to honor those lives that have been lost to crime. It kind of gives you hope for a future to watch a tree grow, to watch the plants grow. Sheila's no longer with us, neither is her daughter, but yet it gives you something you can love that's real and tangible other than a stone in a graveyard. Now I'm living, you know, I'm proof of what could happen. And this mother is hoping to make a difference. Tammy Fernandez's daughter, Melissa, was shot down in a drive-by shooting at Ballard High School just a few weeks ago. Now Fernandez and other mothers against violence are going to the nation's capital this week seeking changes, a ban on assault weapons. I don't understand why those are even being, why they have to be sold, why does anybody even need to buy them, unless they're out to hurt somebody. Fernandez and the mother of another innocent teen gunned down. We'll meet with Vice President Gore on Tuesday and hold a news conference at the Capitol. Would you pay to have a list of convicted sex offenders who are living in your neighborhood while one Federal Way man is hoping you will? Rodney Britton tells the Federal Way News he has lists of convicted sex offenders broken down by zip code and is sending them out to subscribers. He's charging between $30 and $40 a year for the lists. Now it includes the names, addresses, most recent sex offense convictions, and the physical description of the offender. It lists all adults and minors who have been convicted of sex-related felonies since 1990. You can get all that information printed out at the King County Sheriff's Office for $20. Britton, who owns a security business, says while he's doing this to make money, he says his main concern is the safety of children and helping parents protect them. He says part of the money he makes will go to a charity that helps abused children. The preparations continue in Yorba Linda, California tonight for the arrival of former President Nixon's body. The body will be flown to California on Tuesday where it will lie in state at the Nixon Library. Today, crews continue to put up bleachers and get the area around the library ready for the thousands of people expected to arrive over the next few days. The public is welcome at the library on Tuesday and Wednesday morning. The funeral will be on Wednesday afternoon. Wednesday is also a national day of mourning. All federal offices, including post offices, will be closed on Wednesday. Things are tense in South Africa. After a deadly bomb explosion today, nine people were killed, more than 100 injured. When a car bomb exploded near the headquarters of the African National Congress. The tension is in the air as the country is just two days away.