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Jury watches surveillance videos at trial of 2 men accused of killing Regent Park youth worker
Jury watches surveillance videos at trial of 2 men accused of killing Regent Park youth worker

Yahoo

time27-03-2025

  • Yahoo

Jury watches surveillance videos at trial of 2 men accused of killing Regent Park youth worker

A jury in a Toronto courtroom watched surveillance videos on Wednesday at the trial of two men charged with first-degree murder of a Regent Park youth worker. The Crown alleges Noah Anderson, 23, and Junior Jahmal Harvey, 23, were among four masked men who fired dozens of bullets in Regent Park on the evening of Sept. 18, 2021, killing Thane Murray, 27, and injuring his two friends. Murray, of Toronto, was shot several times in the area of Oak and Sumach streets. He died at the scene. His two friends also suffered gunshot wounds. An advocate for Regent Park's youth, Murray worked at several recreational facilities in Toronto and was an employee of the Regent Park Community Centre. The videos that were shown to the jury focus on a sedan considered a key part of the evidence in the case being heard at the Superior Court of Justice. The Crown has been reviewing surveillance videos to show how it believes the four alleged shooters travelled to Regent Park on the day of the shooting. The jury has spent days watching videos of a sedan that the Crown believes the four men used to carry out the murder. Toronto police vehicles are shown here Oak Street and Sumach Street on the evening of Sept. 18, 2021. (Jeremy Cohn/CBC News) One video shows the sedan of interest on a side street near the Chelsea Hotel on Gerrard Street W. Video shows four masked men leaving the hotel. The Crown alleges the four walked to the sedan and drove it to Regent Park to carry out the shooting. The Crown used video to track the vehicle returning to the same street near the hotel half a hour later. Video also captured masked men walking back into the Chelsea hotel. On Wednesday afternoon, the Crown presented images of the alleged shooters in the hotel wearing masks after the shooting. The Crown told the jury that Anderson, before the murder, had rented a 2012 beige Nissan Altima sedan and a room at the Chelsea Hotel. Both were rented for a week. According to an agreed statement of facts, Anderson rented the sedan on Sept. 15, 2021, parked it outside the hotel on Sept. 17 and conducted a transaction at the front desk of the hotel on Sept. 20 for $304.04. The Crown alleges the Nissan he rented closely resembles the sedan captured on video, but the defence is challenging that argument. Toronto police officers are shown here searching the crime scene. According to an agreed statement of facts, forensic identification officers found 59 shell casing at the homicide scene on Sept. 18 and 19, 2021. (Jeremy Cohn/CBC News) According to the agreed statement of facts, Toronto police forensic identification officers found 59 shell casing at the homicide scene on Sept. 18 and 19. A year later, on Sept. 12, 2022, during an unrelated drug investigation, police recovered a firearm from a residence and it was determined to be a Glock 48. The firearm was sent to the Centre of Forensic Sciences for more testing. On Oct. 26, 2022, a firearm expert determined at least one of the shell casings found from the homicide scene was fired by the Glock 48 seized by police during the drug investigation.

Jury watches surveillance videos at trial of 2 men accused of killing Regent Park youth worker
Jury watches surveillance videos at trial of 2 men accused of killing Regent Park youth worker

CBC

time27-03-2025

  • CBC

Jury watches surveillance videos at trial of 2 men accused of killing Regent Park youth worker

A jury in a Toronto courtroom watched surveillance videos on Wednesday at the trial of two men charged with first-degree murder of a Regent Park youth worker. The Crown alleges Noah Anderson, 23, and Junior Jahmal Harvey, 23, were among four masked men who fired dozens of bullets in Regent Park on the evening of Sept. 18, 2021, killing Thane Murray, 27, and injuring his two friends. Murray, of Toronto, was shot several times in the area of Oak and Sumach streets. He died at the scene. His two friends also suffered gunshot wounds. An advocate for Regent Park's youth, Murray worked at several recreational facilities in Toronto and was an employee of the Regent Park Community Centre. The videos that were shown to the jury focus on a sedan considered a key part of the evidence in the case being heard at the Superior Court of Justice. The Crown has been reviewing surveillance videos to show how it believes the four alleged shooters travelled to Regent Park on the day of the shooting. The jury has spent days watching videos of a sedan that the Crown believes the four men used to carry out the murder. One video shows the sedan of interest on a side street near the Chelsea Hotel on Gerrard Street W. Video shows four masked men leaving the hotel. The Crown alleges the four walked to the sedan and drove it to Regent Park to carry out the shooting. The Crown used video to track the vehicle returning to the same street near the hotel half a hour later. Video also captured masked men walking back into the Chelsea hotel. On Wednesday afternoon, the Crown presented images of the alleged shooters in the hotel wearing masks after the shooting. The Crown told the jury that Anderson, before the murder, had rented a 2012 beige Nissan Altima sedan and a room at the Chelsea Hotel. Both were rented for a week. According to an agreed statement of facts, Anderson rented the sedan on Sept. 15, 2021, parked it outside the hotel on Sept. 17 and conducted a transaction at the front desk of the hotel on Sept. 20 for $304.04. The Crown alleges the Nissan he rented closely resembles the sedan captured on video, but the defence is challenging that argument. According to the agreed statement of facts, Toronto police forensic identification officers found 59 shell casing at the homicide scene on Sept. 18 and 19. A year later, on Sept. 12, 2022, during an unrelated drug investigation, police recovered a firearm from a residence and it was determined to be a Glock 48. The firearm was sent to the Centre of Forensic Sciences for more testing. On Oct. 26, 2022, a firearm expert determined at least one of the shell casings found from the homicide scene was fired by the Glock 48 seized by police during the drug investigation.

Man sentenced to 24 years in Mars Hill attempted murder, carjacking of postal worker
Man sentenced to 24 years in Mars Hill attempted murder, carjacking of postal worker

Yahoo

time17-03-2025

  • Yahoo

Man sentenced to 24 years in Mars Hill attempted murder, carjacking of postal worker

ASHEVILLE - A Weaverville man who pleaded guilty in the September 2023 attempted murder and carjacking of a U.S. postal worker was sentenced to 24 years. Jaden Isaiah Garay, 25, was federally indicted by the U.S. Department of Justice in October 2023 after the Sept. 5, 2023, shooting of Hot Springs resident Teresa Ramsay. Garay's sentencing was March 13 at federal court in Asheville. Garay was captured early Sept. 6 in Morganton after a manhunt went on through the night. On Sept. 5, 2023, Mars Hill University went into lockdown just before 1:15 p.m. after officers with Mars Hill Police Department and Madison County Sheriff's Office responded to "an individual with severe injuries and the theft of their vehicle" located just off Main Street near Spring Drive. Garay pleaded guilty to two counts of carjacking resulting in serious bodily injury and four counts of discharging a firearm during and in relation to a crime of violence. According to court documents, Garay was ordered to pay $715,000 in restitution, including $641,000 to Ramsay and $74,000 to the Office of Workers Compensation Program. Ramsay's daughter, Scarlet Ramsay, started a GoFundMe page to help with the medical costs associated with Ramsay's injury. On the page, Scarlet Ramsay also detailed the injuries sustained by her mother. She said her mother underwent surgery Sept. 8, 2023, to remove her left eye and perform facial reconstruction. Rhett Johnson, an assistant federal defender with Federal Public Defender's Western District of North Carolina, served as Garay's lawyer. According to court documents, on Sept. 5, 2023, Garay engaged in an argument with his mother and step-father at their Weaverville residence, where they lived together. During the course of the argument, Garay stole a loaded Glock 48 .9-mm. semiautomatic handgun that belonged to his parents and departed the residence around 10:30 a.m. driving his 2004 Mitsubishi Endeavor. Just before 11 a.m., Ramsay began her mail route in Mars Hill, driving her personal right-side-drive Jeep Wrangler. At around 11:50 a.m., court documents said, Garay, who was driving eastbound along Interstate 26 near Exit 11 for Mars Hill, fired the Glock pistol into another vehicle that had a 17-year-old passenger and was also headed eastbound along I-26, shattering the front passenger window and lodging a bullet in the vehicle. A short time after, Garay exited I-26 and drove into the town of Mars Hill before abandoning his car at Mars Hill Dentistry's parking lot on South Main Street. Garay then broke into a residence on Spring Drive, where he encountered the homeowner and displayed the Glock 48 and took the Spring Drive resident's cellphone, according to the documents. "Garay stomped on the cell phone and tried to break it, but was unable to do so, and instead kept the phone," the court documents said. Garay then threatened to shoot the resident's dog and told her to get on her knees, but she refused. The Spring Drive homeowner is listed as "M.E." in the court documents. "M.E. refused to do so and told GARAY that if he wanted to shoot her, he would have to shoot her standing up," the court documents said, adding that Garay then went into the resident's garage to start one of her vehicles, but was unable to do so, and continued walking through the neighborhood. After leaving the Spring Drive residence, Garay encountered Ramsay, who was delivering mail to a mailbox from her Jeep Wrangler. According to the documents, Garay approached Ramsay and told her, "I am being chased by evil spirits" and "evil spirits are following me," to which Ramsay replied, "I love Jesus, I'll pray with, brother, when I finish scanning these," as she was then in the process of scanning a mail item. In response, Garay said, "I need your car" and he then pointed the Glock 48 handgun at Ramsay, listed as "T.R." in the documents. "T.R. attempted to comply with Garay's demand, but had to pull forward slightly to exit the vehicle because her door was blocked by a mailbox," the court documents said. "T.R. also attempted to retrieve her cellphone. "Garay then shot T.R. in the face with the intent to cause death or serious bodily injury and for the purpose of taking her motor vehicle. T.R. fell out of her vehicle and to the ground." As Ramsay's Jeep Wrangler contained all the mail she had not yet delivered that day, Garay drove out of Mars Hill and sometime later that afternoon on Sept. 5 dumped most of the stolen mail in the driveway of a Weaverville residence, documents said. Shortly before 7:30 p.m. Sept. 5, Garay engaged law enforcement officers in a high-speed chase, as Burke County Communications advised the Burke County Sheriff's Office of a high-speed chase that was occurring in McDowell County and was about to enter Burke County on Interstate 40. Garay was seen at 4:24 a.m. Sept. 6 after detectives noticed him appearing to look into cars in the parking area of one of the cottages on the J. Iverson Riddle Developmental Center property, a state-operated developmental center for the western region of the state. At 4:57 a.m., Garay was spotted in the field across from the Burke County Jail on Government Drive, and was taken into custody at 5 a.m., according to the Burke County Sheriff's Office. More: Man to be sentenced in Mars Hill attempted murder, postal vehicle carjacking More: Weaverville man pleads guilty in attempted murder, carjacking of Mars Hill postal worker More: Update: Mars Hill carjacking suspect charged with attempted murder, Sheriff's Office says More: Mars Hill University lockdown lifted after suspected carjacking of U.S. Mail vehicle Chief U.S. District Judge Martin Reidinger issued the sentence, while Assistant U.S. Attorney David Thorneloe served as the prosecutor in the sentencing hearing. As of March 17, the GoFundMe had raised roughly $29,000. To donate to the GoFundMe, visit Johnny Casey is the Madison County communities reporter for The Citizen Times and The News-Record & Sentinel. He can be reached at 828-210-6074 or jcasey@ This article originally appeared on Asheville Citizen Times: Garay sentenced to 24 years in Mars Hill attempted murder, carjacking

Charlotte couple sentenced for roles in illegal firearm activities
Charlotte couple sentenced for roles in illegal firearm activities

Yahoo

time28-02-2025

  • Yahoo

Charlotte couple sentenced for roles in illegal firearm activities

A Charlotte man and his girlfriend were sentenced for their roles in illegal firearm activities, as announced by Acting U.S. Attorney Lawrence J. Cameron. Keon Deangelo Steele, 20, received a 41-month prison sentence followed by three years of supervised release for possessing a machine gun. His girlfriend, Anna Micaiah Denise Mack, 22, was sentenced to 24 months of probation for making a false statement during the purchase of a firearm. The announcement was made by Lawrence J. Cameron, Acting U.S. Attorney for the Western District of North Carolina, with support from Bennie Mims, Special Agent in Charge of the ATF Charlotte Field Division, and Chief Johnny Jennings of the CMPD. Between May and June 2023, Steele sold multiple firearms to undercover officers. On July 6, 2023, Steele offered two firearms and two Glock switches for sale to an undercover officer. ALSO READ: CMPD: Drugs, guns seized during traffic stop A Glock switch is an illegal device that converts a conventional firearm into a machine gun. Law enforcement arrested Steele and Mack at a meeting location where they were found waiting inside a vehicle. A search of the vehicle revealed a Glock 42, .40 caliber pistol outfitted with a Glock switch and an additional Glock switch. The investigation revealed that Mack purchased two firearms, a Glock 22 and a Glock 48, from a federal firearms dealer in Gastonia on June 13, 2023. She falsely claimed to be the actual buyer on ATF Form 4473, when in fact she was purchasing them for Steele. Court records indicate that Mack straw purchased at least seven firearms for Steele over a few weeks. Steele pleaded guilty to possession of a machine gun on June 27, 2024, while Mack pleaded guilty to making a false statement on April 4, 2024. The U.S. Attorney's Office emphasizes the seriousness of straw purchases, which are federal crimes punishable by up to 10 years in prison and a fine of up to $250,000. The public is urged to contact their local ATF office for more information on avoiding participation in such activities. VIDEO: CMPD: Drugs, guns seized during traffic stop

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