
New indictment adds stalking count against Chicago rapper Lil Durk, drops allegation linking lyrics to slaying
A federal grand jury in California has returned a new indictment against Chicago rapper Lil Durk that removes allegations that his lyrics referenced the August 2022 murder of a rival in Los Angeles but adds a new stalking count.
The second superseding indictment comes as lawyers for Lil Durk, whose real name is Durk Davontay Banks, are attempting again to win his release on bond pending trial based on part on what they say were demonstrably false accusations about his lyrics, which were released months before the slaying of rapper Quando Rondo at the heart of the case.
The new indictment was returned Thursday, according to a prosecution filing in the case, but had yet to be posted on the online docket as of Friday afternoon. In addition to removing the language about the rap lyrics, prosecutors said in the filing, the latest indictment charges Durk and his four co-defendants with stalking resulting in death — which can carry up to life in prison under certain circumstances.
Banks, who remains in custody at the federal lockup in Los Angeles, is expected to be arraigned on the new indictment on Thursday, when his attorneys are also planning to argue again for his pretrial release.
'Defendant Banks has presented a false narrative that he is being prosecuted and detained because of his violent lyrics,' prosecutors wrote in a filing Friday explaining the latest indictment and why he should be considered a danger to the community and flight risk. 'This claim is, and has always been, baseless…He should remain detained pending trial.'
Banks' lawyer, Jonathan Brayman, told the Tribune in a statement Friday the government's decision to remove the reference to his client's lyrics from the indictment 'represents a significant vindication of our position on this critical issue.'
'Our team is currently reviewing the new indictment and will respond accordingly in the ongoing fight to secure Mr. Banks' release and ultimate exoneration,' Brayman said.
Banks, 32, was charged in October with paying five associates of his South Side rap consortium, Only the Family, to kill Quando Rondo — born Tyquian Terrel Bowman — in retaliation for the November 2020 shooting death of King Von, another Chicago drill rap artist and Banks' close friend. Prosecutors allege Banks also offered 'lucrative music opportunities' to those who were accused of taking part in the shooting. He pleaded not guilty in November.
Bowman, his sister and his cousin, Saviay'a Robinson, 24, were riding in Bowman's black Cadillac Escalade near a gas station in West Hollywood in August 2022 when gunmen opened fire, according to the federal charges. Bowman and his sister were not injured, but Robinson was struck multiple times and killed.
Banks was arrested near a Florida airport in late October hours after the indictment against his co-defendants was unsealed. Prosecutors allege Banks had purchased seats on three different international flights shortly before his arrest.
In advance of Banks' first detention hearing in December, prosecutors unsealed court records linking the embattled rapper to another alleged murder-for-hire plot involving the Jan. 27, 2022, killing of Stephon Mack, 24, who was shot to death shortly after he exited the Youth Peace Center of Roseland on West 111th Street.
At the time of his death, according to an FBI search warrant affidavit, Mack was the leader of the Smashville faction of the Gangster Disciples. Banks' brother, Dontay Banks, was shot to death outside a nightclub in south suburban Harvey in 2021. According to the warrant application, another Gangster Disciples faction with ties to Smashville carried out the murder.
'Lil Durk was and still is offering money for people to kill those responsible for his brother's murder, and more specifically, offering to pay money for any Gangster Disciple that is killed,' a federal agent wrote in April 2023.
Banks has not been charged in connection with Mack's death.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Yahoo
5 hours ago
- Yahoo
Daywatch: How Illinois officials are reacting to Trump's travel ban
Good morning, Chicago. Chicago immigration advocates and politicians condemned a looming Trump administration travel ban that would bar or restrict travelers from 19 countries, a reprisal and expansion of a similar policy that was fiercely protested across the country during the president's first term. U.S. Rep. Jesús 'Chuy' García lambasted the ban, which is set to take effect at 12:01 a.m. Monday, while accusing President Donald Trump of using the restrictions as a political diversion tactic. 'This travel ban won't make America safer or greater — instead it will isolate us and make people believe they have something to fear,' he posted on the social media site X. 'It's a distraction from the corruption of the Trump Administration.' The Chicago office of the Council on American-Islamic Relations decried the travel ban as 'ideologically motivated, overbroad and unnecessary,' arguing it was signed under a false pretext of protecting national security. Read the full story from the Tribune's Angie Leventis Lourgos. Here are the top stories you need to know to start your day, including what led to a flameout between Donald Trump and Elon Musk, which Illinois hospitals may soon offer a lower level of trauma care and the iconic piece from 'Ferris Bueller's Day Off' that is up for auction. Today's eNewspaper edition | Subscribe to more newsletters | Asking Eric | Horoscopes | Puzzles & Games | Today in History A Chicago police officer was shot and killed during an armed confrontation in a Chatham apartment last night, authorities said. The officer, part of a tactical team in the Gresham (6th) District, was trying to conduct an investigatory stop on a person believed to have a weapon around 9:50 p.m. near the intersection of East 82nd Street and South Drexel Avenue, police Superintendent Larry Snelling said. Maybe it was always going to end this way, with two billionaires angrily posting about each other on social media, fingers flying across pocket-sized screens as their incandescent feud burned hotter by the minute. But even if the finale was predictable, that didn't make it any less shocking. After long months when Donald Trump and Elon Musk appeared united in their chaotic mission to remake Washington, their relationship imploded this week like a star going supernova. A jury found a man guilty of first-degree murder in the slaying of 11-year-old Jayden Perkins as he tried to protect his pregnant mother, ending the trial with a quick verdict after the brutal 2024 attack put a spotlight on protections for domestic violence victims and spurred new legislation. The Chicago Board of Education has narrowed its list for the interim schools' chief down to three candidates in recent days, one of whom faced negligence allegations as a principal, according to documents obtained by the Tribune through the Freedom of Information Act. Prime Healthcare may ask the state for permission to offer lower-level trauma care at three of the eight Illinois hospitals it bought early this year, compared with what those hospitals were providing before the sale, Prime said in a letter sent to U.S. Sens. Dick Durbin and Tammy Duckworth this week. A county caseworker accused of stabbing his ex-girlfriend to death and severely wounding two of her sons in February had been placed on desk duty at the Cook County Juvenile Detention Center after he allegedly threatened to kill the same woman two months earlier, police records show. Indiana Fever star Caitlin Clark said she remains day to day with a left quadriceps strain and will be re-evaluated this weekend after the team's game against the Chicago Sky tomorrow at the United Center. Chicago Sky's Kamilla Cardoso held out of practice with shoulder soreness ahead of United Center game Mr. Hockey has hit 90, but he's still not ready to put his love for the sport on ice. Paul Hruby, whose impact on hockey in Oak Park has been so significant that the ice arena at the Ridgeland Common Recreation Center was named after him in 2007, began his ninth decade of life on May 31. He has worked for the Park District of Oak Park in some capacity for 62 years, teaching and coaching hockey and getting people comfortable in their skates. Few films have done more to cement the city of Chicago's reputation in American culture than 'Ferris Bueller's Day Off,' the 1986 teen comedy classic that follows Ferris and his two friends as they skip school in the suburbs to explore everything the Windy City has to offer. Now, 40 years after cameras first rolled, an iconic piece of the film's wardrobe is jumping off the screen and into one lucky fan's closet. Revisiting 'Ferris Bueller's Day Off' filming locations 40 years later Elizabeth McGovern, the American actress best known for playing Lady Cora in the British TV and movie franchise 'Downton Abbey,' will star in a show headed to Chicago that is based series of real-life interviews given by the Hollywood actress Ava Gardner. Mike Carson made the backdrops for school plays. He also ran the lights. He played football at Plainfield North High School, but at heart, he was a theater kid. As a child, his parents often took him to Chicago theater. That stuck in surprising ways. So much so, you are familiar with Mike Carson's work even if you don't know him by name, or thought of that work as theatrical. Carson, now the creative director at pgLang in Los Angeles, is one of Kendrick Lamar's longtime production designers and creative partners. If you're headed to Solider Field this week to see 'The Grand National Tour' featuring Lamar and SZA, know this: a lot of what you'll see is Mike Carson's ongoing collaboration with Lamar and Dave Free, childhood friends who cofounded pgLang in 2020 as an arts incubator. Also around the area this weekend, a big prize for fastest dinosaur at the Field Museum and a busy weekend at Ravinia Festival in Highland Park.


Chicago Tribune
6 hours ago
- Chicago Tribune
Daywatch: How Illinois officials are reacting to Trump's travel ban
Good morning, Chicago. Chicago immigration advocates and politicians condemned a looming Trump administration travel ban that would bar or restrict travelers from 19 countries, a reprisal and expansion of a similar policy that was fiercely protested across the country during the president's first term. U.S. Rep. Jesús 'Chuy' García lambasted the ban, which is set to take effect at 12:01 a.m. Monday, while accusing President Donald Trump of using the restrictions as a political diversion tactic. 'This travel ban won't make America safer or greater — instead it will isolate us and make people believe they have something to fear,' he posted on the social media site X. 'It's a distraction from the corruption of the Trump Administration.' The Chicago office of the Council on American-Islamic Relations decried the travel ban as 'ideologically motivated, overbroad and unnecessary,' arguing it was signed under a false pretext of protecting national security. Read the full story from the Tribune's Angie Leventis Lourgos. Here are the top stories you need to know to start your day, including what led to a flameout between Donald Trump and Elon Musk, which Illinois hospitals may soon offer a lower level of trauma care and the iconic piece from 'Ferris Bueller's Day Off' that is up for auction. Today's eNewspaper edition | Subscribe to more newsletters | Asking Eric | Horoscopes | Puzzles & Games | Today in History A Chicago police officer was shot and killed during an armed confrontation in a Chatham apartment last night, authorities said. The officer, part of a tactical team in the Gresham (6th) District, was trying to conduct an investigatory stop on a person believed to have a weapon around 9:50 p.m. near the intersection of East 82nd Street and South Drexel Avenue, police Superintendent Larry Snelling said. Maybe it was always going to end this way, with two billionaires angrily posting about each other on social media, fingers flying across pocket-sized screens as their incandescent feud burned hotter by the minute. But even if the finale was predictable, that didn't make it any less shocking. After long months when Donald Trump and Elon Musk appeared united in their chaotic mission to remake Washington, their relationship imploded this week like a star going supernova. A jury found a man guilty of first-degree murder in the slaying of 11-year-old Jayden Perkins as he tried to protect his pregnant mother, ending the trial with a quick verdict after the brutal 2024 attack put a spotlight on protections for domestic violence victims and spurred new legislation. The Chicago Board of Education has narrowed its list for the interim schools' chief down to three candidates in recent days, one of whom faced negligence allegations as a principal, according to documents obtained by the Tribune through the Freedom of Information Act. Prime Healthcare may ask the state for permission to offer lower-level trauma care at three of the eight Illinois hospitals it bought early this year, compared with what those hospitals were providing before the sale, Prime said in a letter sent to U.S. Sens. Dick Durbin and Tammy Duckworth this week. A county caseworker accused of stabbing his ex-girlfriend to death and severely wounding two of her sons in February had been placed on desk duty at the Cook County Juvenile Detention Center after he allegedly threatened to kill the same woman two months earlier, police records show. Indiana Fever star Caitlin Clark said she remains day to day with a left quadriceps strain and will be re-evaluated this weekend after the team's game against the Chicago Sky tomorrow at the United Center. Mr. Hockey has hit 90, but he's still not ready to put his love for the sport on ice. Paul Hruby, whose impact on hockey in Oak Park has been so significant that the ice arena at the Ridgeland Common Recreation Center was named after him in 2007, began his ninth decade of life on May 31. He has worked for the Park District of Oak Park in some capacity for 62 years, teaching and coaching hockey and getting people comfortable in their skates. Few films have done more to cement the city of Chicago's reputation in American culture than 'Ferris Bueller's Day Off,' the 1986 teen comedy classic that follows Ferris and his two friends as they skip school in the suburbs to explore everything the Windy City has to offer. Now, 40 years after cameras first rolled, an iconic piece of the film's wardrobe is jumping off the screen and into one lucky fan's closet. Elizabeth McGovern, the American actress best known for playing Lady Cora in the British TV and movie franchise 'Downton Abbey,' will star in a show headed to Chicago that is based series of real-life interviews given by the Hollywood actress Ava Gardner. Mike Carson made the backdrops for school plays. He also ran the lights. He played football at Plainfield North High School, but at heart, he was a theater kid. As a child, his parents often took him to Chicago theater. That stuck in surprising ways. So much so, you are familiar with Mike Carson's work even if you don't know him by name, or thought of that work as theatrical. Carson, now the creative director at pgLang in Los Angeles, is one of Kendrick Lamar's longtime production designers and creative partners. If you're headed to Solider Field this week to see 'The Grand National Tour' featuring Lamar and SZA, know this: a lot of what you'll see is Mike Carson's ongoing collaboration with Lamar and Dave Free, childhood friends who cofounded pgLang in 2020 as an arts incubator. Also around the area this weekend, a big prize for fastest dinosaur at the Field Museum and a busy weekend at Ravinia Festival in Highland Park.

Yahoo
16 hours ago
- Yahoo
Verdict awaits after closing arguments in Derrick Thompson's trial for crash that killed 5
The crash that killed five young women in south Minneapolis nearly three years ago was not just an accident, bad luck or chance, the prosecution said Thursday in its closing argument in the trial of Derrick John Thompson. It was murder in the third degree, Hennepin County prosecutor Paige Starkey told jurors, 'because these five young women lost their lives as a direct consequence of the reckless, selfish, destructive choices of another driver.' After five days of testimony, the jury received the case at 11:30 a.m. Thursday and began deliberations to decide whether the state had proved beyond a reasonable doubt that Thompson — the 29-year-old son of a former St. Paul state representative — is guilty of five counts of third-degree murder and 10 counts of criminal vehicular homicide for allegedly operating a motor vehicle in a grossly negligent manner and leaving the scene of an accident. The jury had not reached a verdict as of 4:30 p.m. and was sent home for the day. They will reconvene Friday. Prosecutors say Thompson was driving 95 mph on Interstate 35W in a rented Cadillac Escalade SUV when he passed a Minnesota State Trooper, exited on Lake Street at 116 mph, and then ran a red light at Second Avenue, crashing into the victims' Honda Civic just after 10 p.m. June 16, 2023. Pronounced dead at the scene were Salma Mohamed Abdikadir, 20, of St. Louis Park; Sabiriin Mohamoud Ali, 17, of Bloomington; Sahra Liban Gesaade, 20, of Brooklyn Center; Sagal Burhaan Hersi, 19, of Minneapolis, and Siham Adan Odhowa, 19, of Minneapolis. They were returning from preparing for a friend's wedding, which was to be the next day. In September, prosecutors added the five counts of third-degree murder, which is defined in state statute as 'perpetrating an act eminently dangerous to others and evincing a depraved mind, without regard for human life.' 'Members of the jury, not every murder is calculated or considered,' Starkey said. 'Not every murder is directed at a particular person or people.' Tyler Bliss, Thompson's attorney, tried to cast doubt during the trial that his client was the driver, despite jurors seeing surveillance video of him renting the Escalade from Hertz at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport and then driving away. Bliss suggested his older brother, Damarco Thompson, was the driver that night, pointing to evidence that his hat and a set of car keys were found inside the crashed SUV. In response, the state subpoenaed Damarco to take the stand. On Wednesday, he testified that he never drove the Escalade. He said the two of them drove a short distance from the airport, stopped and Derrick transferred some possessions from their Dodge Challenger into the Escalade, which his brother then drove away. In his closing arguments Thursday, Bliss questioned the credibility of Demarco, who he said is a 'person with one of the most strong motives to give self-serving testimony I've ever encountered in a case. Who on Earth would want to be associated with this situation?' Early on in the state's one-hour long closing argument, prosecutors reminded jurors of how Thompson acted after the crash by replaying police officer body-cam video of an interaction with Thompson. 'Do you know how long this is going to take?' he asked an officer while sitting in the back of a squad car, adding he had 'things I do wanna get done on my Friday night, you know?' Starkey went on to go through the video evidence in chronological order from that night, starting with Thompson at Hertz and the Escalade speeding past a state trooper parked under an I-35W overpass. 'Members of the jury, you make the decision,' Starkey said. 'Has his driving conduct changed? Does it appear that he's now going faster? … You can see the trooper behind him hasn't gained a lot, because at this point, he's got his foot down on the accelerator.' Video showed the trooper wasn't able to catch up or turn on the squad's emergency lights or sirens before the speeding SUV turned off the interstate and narrowly missed cars. Then, the violent collision, which sent off a large plume of smoke. 'Derrick Thompson's behavior, his series of choices that night were criminal,' Starkey said, 'because they were eminently dangerous to everyone and anyone who happened to be on the road that night.' Short video clips were replayed of Thompson crossing Lake Street and walking into a Taco Bell parking lot, where he 'makes the decision basically to try to blend in,' Starkey said. 'Why are you bleeding?' an officer asks Thompson after he's seen sitting on a parking lot curb with an injury to his face. He told officers it was an old injury, then said he had fallen at Lake Street and Fifth Avenue earlier in the night. Another video clip showed what Starkey said was Thompson 'struggling to turn and manipulate his body to even sit down in the back of the squad car.' He was taken to the hospital for treatment for a fracture on the right side of his hip, which Starkey said is 'wholly consistent' with him slamming on the brake pedal before impact. Starkey reminded jurors that the state's first witness, Kanitra Walker, Thompson's former girlfriend, testified that he had called her from the hospital and that he said he was driving. Starkey pointed out that state troopers had testified the mangled Escalade's passenger-side doors were stuck shut, casting doubt that Thompson was a passenger in the SUV. Although Starkey acknowledge that a DNA mixture found on the inside driver's door matched Derrick and Damarco, she added that brothers and family members share characteristics of DNA and also that transfer is possible with DNA. 'I want to be clear: There is no evidence in this case that more than one person was ever driving the Cadillac Escalade,' Starkey said. 'No one saw another driver, there's no video of another driver.' Over the course of at least two minutes, Thompson made the criminally reckless choices 'to drive the way he did both on and the interstate and off — and 'that is indifference to human life,' Starkey said. In the defense closing argument, Bliss said there is no evidence that Thompson knew he was being followed by the state trooper. Thompson's attorney said the driver who was 'trying to jab on that brake' showed 'regard for human life.' Ex-teacher of Hmong College Prep Academy in St. Paul sentenced for criminal sexual conduct with student 'Felt as though they were going to kill me,' Mahtomedi man beaten and robbed of casino winnings says in court Macalester alum sues over animal testing in psychology labs; college responds David French: Why Trump is mad at 'sleasebag' Leonard Leo St. Paul man sentenced to workhouse for throwing fatal 'sucker punch' outside East Side bar Driving at 'great speeds' is recklessness and not a depraved act or acting with indifference to life, Bliss said. 'This is recklessness, realization of the mistake and an inability to resolve from that mistake,' he said. 'Because of that, whoever's driving this vehicle is not guilty of any of the murder charges here.' Thompson's father, John Thompson, was a first-term lawmaker representing St. Paul's East Side when he was defeated in the DFL primary in August 2022 in the wake of a number of controversies, which included questions about his official residence following a July 2021 traffic stop in St. Paul. In November, Thompson turned down a plea offer from the Hennepin County Attorney's Office that called for a prison term between 32½ and nearly 39 years for pleading guilty to five counts of criminal vehicular homicide.