logo
Man charged with murder after deadly shooting at liquor store near 9th, Prospect

Man charged with murder after deadly shooting at liquor store near 9th, Prospect

Yahoo30-04-2025

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Jackson County prosecutors have charged a man in connection with a .
Jeremiah Williamson is charged with second-degree murder, first-degree attempted robbery and armed criminal action.
Man pleads guilty for role in 2021 Independence double homicide
According to court documents, Kansas City police officers responded just before 6 p.m. on Monday to a shooting at a liquor store in the area of East 9th Street and Prospect Avenue.
When officers arrived, they located a man in the parking lot who had been shot. He was taken to University Health Medical Center where he was pronounced dead.
A witness told detectives that he shot the man while defending himself then called 911.
The witness stated he was inside the store with his girlfriend and was talking to the cashier after making a purchase when he noticed two men standing in the line next to him. As the men walked past him, the witness said one of them tried to grab his firearm – a 9mm pistol that was in the witness' pants pocket.
The witness said he immediately tried to secure his gun as he began to physically struggle with the man. During the struggle, the witness said he and the man who grabbed his gun fell to the ground. That's when he said the second man pulled a gun from his waistband and pointed it at him (the witness) while he was on the ground fighting with the other man, court documents say.
According to court documents, the man who was on the ground fighting with the witness yelled at the second man to 'hurry up and shoot him.'
The witness said he was able to get ahold of his gun as they were all getting up from the ground, which is when he fired it at the man who first grabbed his gun, according to court documents.
The witness said the suspect fell to the ground outside the front door – and the other suspect, identified as Williamson, ran to the back of the store.
Download the FOX4 News app on iPhone and Android
After the shooting, the witness said he called 911 to report the incident.
Williamson is being held on a $100,000 cash bond, according to the Jackson County Prosecutor's Office.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Gen Z Most Likely to Suffer Extortion Scams
Gen Z Most Likely to Suffer Extortion Scams

Newsweek

time40 minutes ago

  • Newsweek

Gen Z Most Likely to Suffer Extortion Scams

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. While Gen Z might have grown up immersed in technology, they are now the number one target for extortion scammers, according to a new report. In Malwarebytes's new Mobile Scam Report, Gen Z was deemed the top extortion target, with 28 percent of the age group experiencing extortion scams. This was far higher than both Gen X and baby boomers, at 15 and 7 percent, respectively. Why It Matters Extortion scams are criminal schemes where the fraudster attempts to blackmail a victim for money or personal information. While scammers might threaten physical harm, the digital age has ushered in a new type of scammer, with many targeting younger people with threats of releasing sexually explicit photographs or videos to the world. They also may claim to be the police, requesting money or personal data if the victim wants to avoid arrest. In this photo illustration, a 13-year-old boy looks at an iPhone screen display on May 21 in Bath, England. In this photo illustration, a 13-year-old boy looks at an iPhone screen display on May 21 in Bath, To Know In 2023, the FBI reported 48,000 extortion victims, a 22 percent jump from 2022, and many of the victims are Gen Zers. Those born in the generation—from 1997 to 2012—were more likely to encounter extortion scams than older age groups. Roughly 58 percent of Gen Z and 52 percent of millennials had countered an extortion scam, whereas only 35 percent and 23 percent of Gen X and boomers had, according to the new Malwarebytes report. Gen Z was also much more likely to actually fall for the scams, with 28 percent experiencing one. Roughly 13 percent of these scams were virtual kidnapping, while another 13 percent were attributed to deepfakes. Sextortion cases made up 11 percent. "The woman asked for a small amount of money which I was reluctant to give, but she harassed me, so I decided to," one Gen Z survey respondent said. "Then she wanted to send me money to send to her friend. I accepted the money, but then alarms went off and I never sent it to her friend. I later learned about money mules. She then threatened to kill me because I had taken $1k when she only got $300. I then blocked her and called the police because I was scared." Much of the higher risk for Gen Z and millennials comes down to how they use their digital devices. By sharing personal data with apps and websites, fraudsters are able to more easily target them. "This isn't a Gen Z problem - it's a societal and political failure," Bryan Driscoll, HR consultant who specializes in generational differences, told Newsweek. "Parents, schools, tech companies, and policymakers have dropped the ball. We failed to teach boundaries, privacy, or skepticism. Instead, we taught them to post everything, trust algorithms, and chase validation in likes and follows." Roughly 90 percent of mobile users shared deep levels of personal data with apps and websites, according to the survey. And younger users were the most permissive, with 91 percent of Gen Zers and millennials saying they grant apps access to their location, camera, photo library, and/or contacts compared to 80 percent for Gen X and older. "A generation - and society - that normalizes surveillance, has a fractured sense of privacy, and is increasingly vulnerable to manipulation is doomed," Driscoll said. "If we don't build genuine protections - and it doesn't look like we're going to based on current federal policy proposals to explicitly ban any AI regulation for a decade - this will only get worse." What People Are Saying Alex Beene, financial literacy instructor for the University of Tennessee at Martin, told Newsweek: "There's a misconception that older Americans are most in danger when it comes to mobile scams. The reality is Gen Z finds themselves at the top of most rankings when it comes to falling for digital deception. While they may be younger and more tech savvy, Gen Z are also connected to their devices more frequently and may fall for scams based on impulse." Driscoll also told Newsweek: "I'm not surprised Gen Z is the top target. It's the logical outcome of growing up with the world at your fingertips without appropriate digital literacy or regulation to match. The platforms Gen Z has known their entire lives are designed to manipulate behavior, harvest data, and reward oversharing. We've handed them the internet with no roadmap or guardrails and then act shocked when predators, scammers, and AI exploit that vulnerability." Drew Powers, founder of Illinois-based Powers Financial Group, told Newsweek: "When you first hear this, it may seem counterintuitive given that Gen Z has grown up with the Internet, social media, and mobile communications, but it actually makes perfect sense. Baby Boomers and Generation X can vividly recall the days before the Internet, and therefore we have a built-in distrust around most anonymous electronic communications. Gen Z on the other hand, is far more comfortable with and trusting of these platforms." What Happens Next To lower the rate of younger Americans falling for extortion scams, an increased emphasis likely needs to be on teaching literacy for younger generations. Just because they grew up with technology does not mean they are more prepared against scams, Beene said. "We need to quit assuming this group can navigate through digital waters because of their youth and experience with technology," Beene said. "If anything, the younger you are, the more you need to go through training on potential scams that could target your identity and money."

Jury acquits Pensacola 20-year-old in 2023 killing of Angel Bailey
Jury acquits Pensacola 20-year-old in 2023 killing of Angel Bailey

Yahoo

time44 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Jury acquits Pensacola 20-year-old in 2023 killing of Angel Bailey

An Escambia County jury took just a few hours June 11 to acquit a Pensacola man charged with murdering 32-year-old Angel Bailey in 2023. The jury found Nathaniel Cunningham Jr. not guilty of second-degree murder at the end of a two-day trial June 10 and 11. Following Cunningham's acquittal, his attorney Greg Whibbs told the News Journal this case was a "big win" for his client as it kept Cunningham from a potential life sentence in a Florida prison. According to Willie Agee, the owner of the Mission Road home in which the incident took place, the shooting occurred after an argument about Bailey's cellphone. "Agee stated he was in his room watchin TV when Bailey and Cunningham Jr. came to his room arguing because Bailey was accusing Cunningham Jr. of stealing her iPhone," a report said. "Agee stated that he let Bailey borrow his phone so that she could call to report her phone stolen." Agee told law enforcement he heard gunshots roughly four to five minutes later. During Agee's recorded 911 call in 2023, he told the operator that he thinks his grandson "Nate" killed Bailey. In another 911 recording McGraw played during the trial, Bailey is speaking with a dispatcher about reporting her phone as stolen. During the call, Bailey begins screaming and saying, "No! Please don't shoot me." Throughout the trial, Whibbs asked questions of witnesses pertaining to the person named "Nate" from the 911 call made by Agee. Whibbs told the jury there were multiple people who use the nickname "Nate" who were at or near the Mission Road home March 25, 2023, when the shooting occurred. That coupled with the fact crime scene technicians did not find any DNA evidence or fingerprints at the scene directly linking Cunningham to the shooting seemingly led the jury to acquit the 20-year-old. Evidence presented during the trial showed that Cunningham's cellphone saved tracking data that placed him at the 2900 block of Mission Road just minutes before the shooting took place, but Whibbs argued that evidence does not prove anything beyond a reasonable doubt as that just shows a phone's location, not who is in possession of the phone. This article originally appeared on Pensacola News Journal: Nathaniel Cunningham not guilty of murdering Angel Bailey

Kyle Coleman search: Body found amid effort to locate missing Morehouse College student
Kyle Coleman search: Body found amid effort to locate missing Morehouse College student

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Kyle Coleman search: Body found amid effort to locate missing Morehouse College student

The Brief Authorities are working to confirm if the body found in Tysons Corner is Kyle Coleman. Coleman's car crashed Friday night, but was empty when first responders arrived. Search efforts discovered a body near Westpark Drive. FAIRFAX COUNTY, Va. - Authorities are working to confirm whether a body recovered from a pond in Tysons Corner is that of 19-year-old Kyle Coleman, who went missing early Saturday after a reported crash. What we know Coleman, a Morehouse College student, was out with friends in the Tysons area on Friday night. At 11:20 p.m., his iPhone sent an automatic crash detection alert to 911, indicating his car had hit a tree. The dispatcher reported hearing screaming in the background. When first responders arrived, the vehicle was empty. For three days, Fairfax County deployed detectives, officers, helicopters, drones, forensic teams, K-9 units, and search and rescue teams to locate Coleman. SKYFOX aerial footage showed the Fairfax County Police Dive Team searching the area near Westpark Drive and Galleria Drive, where the body was recovered. READ MORE: Body recovered from pond amid search for missing man in Fairfax County What we know In Prince William County, community members gathered at Battlefield High School, where Coleman graduated last year. They lit candles, shared memories, and prayed. Authorities continue to investigate. The Source Information in this article comes from the Prince William County Police Department and previous FOX 5 reporting.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store