PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti -- Hundreds of people packed into a sweltering church in Haiti's capital on Tuesday to mourn Judes Montis, a mission director killed by gang members who also fatally shot an American couple who worked with him. Wails filled the crowded church during the early morning service as tears streamed down the face of Montis' wife. The service also honored the lives of Davy and Natalie Lloyd, a couple in their early 20s who were with Montis when gunmen ambushed them on Thursday night as they left a youth group activity held at a local church.
Montis, 47, leaves behind a wife, two children, ages 2 and 6, and a brother who was present the night that the killings occurred. "We'll never forget you or the path you created for others!" cried out one mourner as the crowd dressed in black and white made its way from the church to the cemetery. The service was held just days after the three were killed in a gang-controlled area in a northern part of Port-au-Prince where Montis worked as the local director of the Oklahoma-based Missions in Haiti, a religious organization founded by David and Alicia Lloyd, Davy Lloyd's parents.
"We are facing the most difficult time of our life," Missions in Haiti said in a recent Facebook post. "Thank you for all your prayers and support." Montis' brother, Esuaue Montis, a 43-year-old Spanish teacher with the mission, told The Associated Press reporters that he was nearby during the shootings.
He said that he saw the gunmen arrive and he u.
