
Glamorous realtor's life snuffed out in clash over Mercedes Benz that was all caught on camera
A glamorous Texas realtor had her life snuffed out during a tense clash that all started with the innocent brush of a Mercedes Benz.
Ashlee Long, 28, was shot dead on April 5 while visiting Dallas for a work conference.
While out on the town with a friend in downtown Dallas around 2:30 a.m., her friend touched a white Mercedes as it drove by on the street, prompting the luxury sedan to come to a stop on the street.
The driver, Kendrick Finch, emerged with a 9mm handgun.
Footage of the incident shows Long's friend, William Kistler, 36, reaching for Long's purse which had his gun in it.
Kistler struggled with Long, as she tried to hold him back. He eventually retrieved a 40 caliber pistol from her bag.
Finch then started shooting at the pair on the busy street filled with shops, restaurants and apartment buildings, shooting Long in the process.
Kistler, who was able to fire three shots from his weapon, was also hit and taken to the hospital while Finch fled.
Finch called police hours later, according to location station Fox 4, and identified himself as the shooter, however, it wasn't until April 18 when he turned himself over to investigators.
His previous criminal records include drug and burglary charges, the TV station reported.
Despite Finch fleeing from the crime scene, his lawyer claims the person who is to blame for the shooting is Kistler.
'We know for sure Ashlee Long would be alive today except for William Kistler. William Kisseler is the one who started everything that night. It showed in the video,' her attorney stated in court.
While out on the town with a friend April 5 around 2:30 a.m., Long's friend touched a white Mercedes as it drove by on the street, prompting the luxury sedan to come to a stop on the street. The friend was later identified as William Kistler, 36
'We don't have the toxicology report yet of these two individuals, but I can bet where that's going to end up.
'He's trying to fight random people on the street and then my client's car. Driving by at a normal rate of speed gets hit.'
Finch was only defending himself, his lawyer added.
'When (Kistler) takes those steps towards my client, my client has every right under the law to defend himself.'
Long's family declined to speak to the media after the court hearing Wednesday, but had previously told local reporters their daughter was in the wrong place at the wrong time.
'I'm still in a fog. I just feel like I'm in a daze every day,' Michelle Long, Ashlee's mother told the outlet in April.

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