"I'm looking death in the face" inside the 16-story apartment building at Queen Lane and Pulaski Avenue, Kelley said. "I was helpless."
Kelley, 50, said the gunman in the attack about 10 p.m. on Feb. 17, 2008, was wearing a scarf over the lower half of his face, and said, "Don't move."
Before Kelley, who has been a PHA officer for 17 years, could close the door, the gunman fired, striking him in the left side of his abdomen, he said.
He said the force of the shot spun him around before knocking him down.
"I'm lying on the ground. I could barely breathe," Kelley said. "He's continuing to fire. There was glass and debris flying around me. I was praying."
Boddy-Johnson, now 18, is charged with attempted murder, aggravated assault, and possession of a firearm on a public street. He could face from 35 to 50 years in prison if convicted of all charges.
The jury trial, which is expected to take about seven days, is being presided over by Common Pleas Court Judge Gwendolyn Bright.
In her opening statement yesterday, Assistant District Attorney Deborah Nixon told the jury that Boddy-Johnson was stopped by police shortly after the shooting on nearby Bringhurst Street.
Nixon said a nylon bag containing 23 bullets was found on the street near where Boddy-Johnson was stopped and that the rifle, which was displayed in court, was found under a van nearby. Nixon described the weapon as an SKF assault rifle.
She said a denim jacket, latex gloves, a bank card, and other evidence linked to Boddy-Johnson were found. She said there was also DNA evidence connecting him to the crime.
Nixon said Boddy-Johnson told police "he bought the gun off the street."
Boddy-Johnson told officers that "his intent was to rob Officer Kelley" of his laptop computer and .40-caliber service weapon, Nixon said.