An 18-year-old woman was shot to death and two men were hit by gunshots early Friday after a fight broke out on the fifth floor of the Spring Hill apartments in Akron, police said.The woman, identified as Brielle Robins of Madison Avenue in Akron, was shot in the chest as she was standing in an apartment doorway, Akron police Lt. Rick Edwards said.She was pronounced dead at the scene at 1:57 a.m., a spokesman for the Summit County Medical Examiner’s Office said.Gary Guenther, the medical examiner’s chief investigator, said autopsy results showed Robins suffered a single gunshot wound to the chest. Her death was ruled a homicide.A management spokesman for the 12-floor apartment building, in the 1200 block of Everton Drive off Vernon Odom Boulevard, declined to comment on what happened.“There was a fight, followed by multiple shots being fired,” Edwards said. He said he had no details about what started the fight.Investigators suspect one gunman was involved, firing from the apartment hallway and hitting the woman and two men, Edwards said.The other victims were identified as a 27-year-old resident of Oberlin Street in Akron, and a 20-year-old who apparently lives at Spring Hill apartments.The 27-year-old was shot in the abdomen and was taken to Akron General Medical Center, where he was listed in serious but stable condition, Edwards said.The 20-year-old has a gunshot wound in the arm. He was taken to Summa Akron City Hospital, where he was treated and released, Edwards said.By noon Friday, Edwards said, investigators were following leads on the shooter, but no arrest had been made.Former Cavaliers star Le-Bron James, now 26, lived with his mother, Gloria James, in a two-bedroom flat at Spring Hill apartments nine years ago, during his playing days at Akron’s St. Vincent-St. Mary High School.The two-time NBA Most Valuable Player, who left the Cavs as a free agent last year and jumped to the Miami Heat, had a segment of his documentary, More Than a Game, filmed at the subsidized-housing complex near the Akron expressway.James even named his entertainment company Spring Hill Productions out of respect for the families he lived with in the complex and because of the impact that living there had on his life, a spokesman said at an Akron charity event last summer.Hours after Friday’s shooting, a group of Spring Hill residents sat on a parkway outside the complex, but none wished to discuss the shooting.An elderly woman, however, who said she has lived at Spring Hill for 33 years, said if there was any early morning ruckus, she slept through it.Most times, she said, declining to give her name, the complex is not dangerous.“It’s a nice place to live,” she said. “Besides, it’s never the building or the community that’s dangerous. It’s just a segment of the people who live there.”The Rev. Duane Crabbs of South Street Ministries said a march from Summit Lake Community Center, 380 W. Crosier St., to Spring Hill apartments is planned for 10:30 this morning.Crabbs said inner-city residents want to speak out against the gun violence and killings in the area the past couple of weeks, pointing to the mass shooting in Copley Township and the wild gunfire that took the life of 11-year-old Carmella Holley in Akron.“These things are adding up, and members of the black community want to participate in this march to say: ‘No more!’ ” Crabbs said.Ed Meyer can be reached at 330-996-3784 or at emeyer@thebeaconjournal.com.