Abdulkadir Handule Found Guilty In Smoke Dawg Murder

Abdulkadir Handule

Abdulkadir Handule has been found guilty of a double murder including that of popular rapper Smoke Dawg. According to court documents Abdulkadir Handule would open fire killing two men, Smoke Dawg whose real name was Jahvante Smart and Ernest Modekwe who was also known as Kobra Prime. The double shooting that took place in June 2018 on a busy Toronto Canada street would also injure a woman. Abdulkadir Handule was convicted of two counts of second degree murder which comes with a minimum sentence of fifteen years to life.

smoke dawg and kobra prime

Abdulkadir Handule More News

The man charged in the 2018 death of both Toronto rapper Smoke Dawg and a brand manager who was well known in the city’s hip-hop scene has been found guilty of two counts of second-degree murder, as well as aggravated assault and discharge of a firearm.

Abdulkadir Handule was found guilty by a jury in Ontario Superior Court Thursday.

In a statement to CBC News, Handule’s lawyer Dirk Derstine said Handule and his family are “deeply disappointed in the verdict,” adding Abdulkadir Handule has asked him to begin the appeal process.

Second-degree murder in Canada comes with a mandatory sentence of life imprisonment with no chance of parole for at least 10 years. Justice Brian O’Marra told court Thursday that he would consider a recommendation from the jury when determining the length of Handule’s sentence before he is eligible for parole.

Before adjourning, O’Marra thanked the jury, saying: “It’s been trying times in society the last two years and in my view, at times when society is under different types of stress, it’s more important than ever that the justice system still be able to operate as best it can. And you have been exemplary in your dedication to the task.”

Abdulkadir Handule is set to be sentenced at 10 a.m. on May 27.

Abdulkadir Handule, who was 22 at the time of killings, earlier pleaded not guilty to two counts of first-degree murder and related charges. His trial began in November but was paused for several weeks over the holidays.

Jahvante Smart, 21, known by his rap name Smoke Dawg, and Ernest Modekwe, 28, a brand manager for the hip-hop collective were gunned down on Queen Street West, which was bustling with people during the Canada Day weekend on June 30, nearly four years ago.

Smart suffered three gunshot wounds, court heard — one to his neck and two in his leg. Modekwe was shot once in the neck. A woman, who was a bystander and who was shot in the leg, survived.

About a year after the shootings,Abdulkadir Handule, known by his rap name 21 Neat, was arrested by RCMP officers in British Columbia for unrelated charges and turned over to Toronto police after a nation-wide warrant for his arrest.

A GoFundMe page set up to cover the funeral and memorial costs for Modekwe described him as a loving son and brother. “His infectious smile lit up any room he entered and he was instantly friends with anyone he met,” the page read.

“After graduating with honours from the University of Toronto, Kosi Modekwe worked hard to help his single mom and provide for his two siblings.”

Smart released his first single in 2015 and was on rapper Drake’s Boy Meets World tour.

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/handule-trial-guilty-smoke-dawg-1.6362949

Abdulkadir Handule Other News

A man has been convicted of second-degree murder in the shooting deaths of Toronto rapper Smoke Dawg, and a brand manager known as Kobra Prime, his lawyer says.

70c8fc80

In an email to Global News, attorney Dirk Derstine confirmed that his client, Abdulkadir Handule, was convicted of two counts of second-degree murder on Thursday.

Twenty-one-year-old Jahvante Smart, aka Smoke Dawg, and 28-year-old Ernest Modekwe, known as Kobra Prime, were shot and killed in June of 2018.

Police said emergency crews were called to Queen Street West near Peter Street, east of Spadina Avenue in the evening of June 30, after receiving reports that gunshots had been fired.

Paramedics transported Smart and Modekwe to a trauma centre, where they both later died.

According to police, a third victim, a woman who is believed to be in her 30s, was also transported to hospital with serious, but non-life-threatening injuries as a result of the incident.

Handule had pleaded not guilty to the charges.

In the email, Derstine said Handule and his family “are saddened by the verdict and have given instructions to pursue an appeal.”

Cierra Coker Charged With Sophia Faye Davis Murder

Cierra Coker photos

Cierra Coker has been charged with murder in the death of one year old Sophia Faye Davis, According to police documents an ambulance was called to a Illinois home where they would find  Sophia Faye Davis suffering from life threatening injuries, the little girl would later die from her injuries. An autopsy report would reveal the little girl had died from a traumatic brain injury caused by a blunt force blow to the head. Cierra Coker was arrested and has been charged with first degree murder and aggravated battery.

Cierra Coker More News

Results of an autopsy performed on February 10 on a one-year-old child who died earlier this month indicate she died as a result of a traumatic brain injury, due to blunt force injuries of the head, according to Sangamon County Coroner Jim Allmon.

Allmon said the death is considered suspicious in nature and under investigation by the Sangamon County Coroner and the Lincoln Police Department.

Sophia Faye Davis was rushed to HSHS St. John’s Hospital by EMS on February 6, 2022 from Logan County. She died on February 8, 2022 at 12:27 p.m. at HSHS St. John’s Hospital.

The Lincoln Police Department arrested Cierra Coker, 20, on Wednesday on charges of first degree murder and aggravated battery in connection to the death of the child.

https://foxillinois.com/news/local/coroner-child-died-from-traumatic-brain-injury-woman-charged

Scott Kologi Teen Killer Guilty Of 4 Murders

Scott Kologi teen killer

Scott Kologi is a teen killer from New Jersey who has just been found guilty of four murders. According to court documents Scott Kologi would murder his parents, sister and a family friend. According to police records Scott Kologi would fatally shoot Linda Kologi, 44, father Steven Kologi Sr., 42, sister, Brittany, 18, and Mary Shulz, 70 on New Years Eve 2017 inside of the New Jersey home. His lawyers attempted to put up a defense saying the teen killer suffered from years of mental abuse however the jury was not buying it. Scott Kologi will be sentenced at a later date

Scott Kologi More News

A Monmouth County jury Thursday found Scott Kologi guilty of the murders of three family members and a close family friend in the family’s Long Branch home minutes before midnight on New Year’s Eve 2017.

The jury rejected arguments by defense attorneys that Kologi was insane when, at age 16, he used his older brother’s assault rifle to shoot and kill his mother, Linda Kologi, 44; father, Steven Kologi Sr., 42; sister, Brittany, 18; and Mary Shulz, 70, the longtime girlfriend of his grandfather whom he regarded as a grandmother, as the family gathered to celebrate the holiday.

Kologi, wearing a mask and seated behind a plexiglass partition in the courtroom of Superior Court Judge Marc C. LeMieux, looked downward toward his lap as the jury foreman announced the panel’s verdict. The defendant, now 20, did not appear to show any emotion.

“His reaction is confirmation of his mental challenges, which is, he is incapable of understanding the gravity of what happened, which is heartbreaking to see,” said Richard Lomurro, one of Kologi’s defense attorneys. 

While Lomurro said he is disappointed in the verdict, he added, “This is a case that needed to be tried, and a jury needed to make this case a lesson about mental health, gun safety and open minds, making sure people get mental health treatment before this happens.”

Lomurro and defense attorney Emeka Nkwuo argued during the trial that their client told family members he was having uncontrollable thoughts about hurting them in the months leading up to the killings, and that he begged his family for help, but his pleas were ignored. The defense attorneys argued that Kologi’s mental illness got progressively worse to the point where he was taken over by a psychotic episode when the killings occurred.

Caitlin Sidley and Sean Brennan, assistant Monmouth County prosecutors, argued Kologi knew exactly what he was doing and knew it was wrong when he loaded each of 30 bullets into magazines for the assault rifle and then pulled the rifle’s trigger 14 times while aiming at family members, hitting his mark 12 of the 14 times.

The jury began deliberating about 9:30 a.m. Thursday, About an hour and 15 minutes after returning from an hourlong lunch break, the panel indicated it had reached a verdict.

The verdict was announced about 3 p.m.

In addition to finding Kologi guilty of the murder, the jury convicted him of possessing a weapon for an unlawful purpose.

The defendant could face four life prison terms for the murders. LeMieux scheduled sentencing for June 30.

The trial began Feb. 9 and, because spectators were not allowed into the courtroom due to the COVID-19 pandemic, it was broadcast live on the New Jersey judiciary’s website, njcourts.gov. 

Although Kologi was a minor when the killings occurred, he was tried as an adult because of the seriousness of the offenses.

Whether the defendant committed the killings was never in question. Within hours of the massacre, Kologi gave a detailed account to detectives, telling them he took his brother’s assault rifle, loaded a total of 30 bullets into two magazines and turned out the lights in his room so his mother wouldn’t see him when she came to look for him minutes before midnight.

When she did, Kologi told the detectives he shot her five to seven times in the chest and torso, and then shot his father in the back when he came upstairs to see what was going on.

After shooting his parents, Kologi said he went downstairs and pumped four bullets into Shulz before turning the gun on his sister and shooting her three times in the chest and head.

The jury viewed a videotape of Kologi’s confession during the trial. Kologi did not testify.

In the videotaped confession, Kologi told detectives about experiencing bizarre hallucinations since he was a child. He said he felt like he was watching a movie as he was killing his family members, something a psychologist testifying for the defense said was indicative of his being in a dissociative state at the time of the shootings. The psychologist, Maureen Santina, testified that Kologi is schizophrenic and was experiencing a psychotic episode during the killings. 

Dr. Park Dietz, a California psychiatrist nationally renowned for performing evaluations on notorious criminals such as serial killer Jeffrey Dahmer and “Unabomber” Theodore Kaczynski, testified for the state and rebutted Santina’s opinion. Dietz testified that Kologi is autistic, not schizophrenic, and knew what he was doing when he killed his family members.

Witnesses testified at the trial that the close-knit family was preparing to ring in the new year and that Linda Kologi was handing out party favors minutes before she went upstairs to look for Scott and was fatally shot.

Steven Kologi Jr. testified his father ran upstairs, and then he saw Scott walk down the stairs calmly with the assault rifle on his hip and proceed to the kitchen, where he shot his sister and Shulz.

Rafaella Bontempo, Steven Jr.’s girlfriend at the time, testified that she hid behind a refrigerator in the kitchen as she called 911.

In his confession, Scott Kologi told Andrea Tozzi, a detective from the Monmouth County Prosecutor’s Office, and Long Branch Detective Michael Verdadeiro  that he snapped out of his daze and stopped shooting when he saw his grandfather, Adrian Kologi, fall to his knees upon witnessing Shulz, his longtime partner, being shot. He told detectives he spared his grandfather’s life and went upstairs to wait for the police to come.

https://www.app.com/story/news/local/courts/2022/02/24/scott-kologi-guilty-verdict-long-branch-nj-family-murders/6928188001/

Shannon Gilday Wanted In Jordan Morgan Murder

Shannon Gilday jordan morgan

Shannon Gilday is wanted for the murder of Jordan Morgan in Kentucky. Jordan Morgan was fatally shot at her family home in Richmond. According to police reports Shannon Gilday forced his way into the home armed with a rifle and would fatally shoot Jordan Morgan as she lied in her bed. After shooting Jordan Morgan Shannon Gilday was involved in an exchange of gunfire with her father Wesley Morgan who was injured however the injuries are not considered to be life threatening. Shannon Gilday would then flee the Morgan residence and Kentucky police have been searching for him since. Police do warn that they believe Shannon Gilday is armed and dangerous. Wesley Morgan is a former Kentucky lawmaker.

Shannon Gilday More News

Kentucky State Police have named a suspect in the killing of lawyer Jordan Morgan, who was shot Tuesday morning while at her parents’ Richmond home.

Shannon Vincent Gilday, 23, of Taylor Mill, has an active warrant for murder, burglary, criminal mischief, assault and two counts of attempted murder, state police said in a statement Thursday.

The investigation indicates Gilday forced his way into the home about 4 a.m., armed with a rifle, and almost immediately shot the 32-year-old Morgan while she was in bed, said Sgt. Robert Purdy, a spokesman for the state police. 

While “there are still a lot of things we’re looking at” investigators currently “don’t believe there is any connection between the two previously,” Purdy said.

A  tip on Tuesday night from someone outside the area helped lead police to identify Gilday, he said.

Surveillance footage from the house in the 1200 block of Willis Branch Road showed a person investigators believe was Gilday before the incident, in a dark camo or tactical-style jacket and pants, a hooded sweatshirt, gloves and a facemask, walking around the house moments before the shooting, state police said.

After shooting Jordan Morgan, Gilday then allegedly confronted her father Wesley Morgan — a former Kentucky lawmaker — and gunshots were exchanged between the two. Wesley Morgan sustained non-life-threatening injuries, and Gilday left the scene in a white passenger car, Purdy said. 

As for motive, he said it’s still under investigation. While police “may have ideas,” he said, they need to find Gilday. Purdy said they have no information about any connections Gilday had to Madison County.

“It doesn’t appear it was necessarily just a burglary,” he said. “There was a criminal action and a violent intent, we believe.”

But Purdy also said police didn’t necessarily believe Jordan Morgan was specifically targeted, adding, “we’re still trying to figure out exactly what happened.”

He would not say what kind of rifle the man carried, but said he may have been wounded in the exchange of fire before he fled. 

“We need the public’s assistance in locating him,” Purdy said.

The Madison County Coroner’s Office has said Jordan Morgan was shot “more than once.” 

Gilday is believed to be driving a White 2016 Toyota Corolla with minor damage to the front grill and a license plate of 379-VMJ. He is about 6-foot tall and 167 pounds, with brown hair and blue eyes.

Gilday does not have a criminal history, according to an online search of Kentucky records. He is considered armed and dangerous and police urge the public not to approach the vehicle or attempt to contact him.   

Jordan Morgan was a lawyer who had also worked as a deputy press secretary for former Gov. Matt Bevin’s administration. 

She earned degrees from Eastern Kentucky and Northern Kentucky universities. She earned her law degree at NKU.

https://www.courier-journal.com/story/news/local/2022/02/24/jordan-morgan-death-kentucky-state-police-name-suspect-shooting-shannon-gilday/6925951001/

jordan morgan

Shannon Gilday Arrested

The search for Jordan Morgan’s murder suspect, Shannon Gilday, ended just after 4:30 a.m. Monday when he was found walking along Barnes Mill Road by Madison County Sheriff’s Office.

Gilday is charged with murder, burglary in the first degree, criminal mischief, assault, and two counts of attempted murder.

Morgan was killed early Tuesday morning in a home invasion on Willis Branch Road in Madison County. She is the daughter of former state representative C. Wesley Morgan.

Police believe 23-year-old Shannon Vince Gilday, of Taylor Mill, forced his way into the home at approximately 4:00 am, armed with a rifle.

Once inside, police believe he shot and killed Morgan while she was in bed. Based on their initial investigation, police believe there was not a connection between Morgan and Shannon Gilday prior to the incident. Sgt. Robert Purdy said they currently believe she was not the target

After the initial shooting, police say Shannon Gilday confronted the homeowner when both fired gunshots at each other. The homeowner sustained non-life-threatening injuries and the armed suspect left the scene in a white passenger car.

Investigators are still working to determine a motive.

Katie Gilday, the mother of the suspect released a statement:

“First I want to state that I am greatly saddened for the Morgan family, friends and loved ones for the pain and suffering it is believed by the police that my son has caused them and especially for the loss of their daughter Jordan. It is a terrible tragedy.
My son Shannon Gilday, who I love so dearly, has not been of sound mind the last couple of weeks, distraught with the certainty a nuclear war is imminent. He spoke of building a bunker and the CIA following him. I tried to get him psychiatric help but to no avail.
I plead to Shannon to turn himself in so that he can get the help he so desperately needs.
Meanwhile, I thank my family and friends for their love and support and ask for our privacy as we navigate through this unthinkable tragedy.”

Police say they learned about Gilday following a “credible tip” Tuesday evening from someone who doesn’t live in the area.

“A lot of times, we say ‘if you see something or you think you know something, call us.’ And that clue and that credible tip is what led to the developments in this investigation.”

https://www.lex18.com/news/crime/ksp-jordan-morgans-murder-suspect-arrested

Nydira Smith Charged In Lincoln University Murder

Nydira Smith lincoln university

Nydira Smith has been arrested and charged in the Lincoln University stabbing that left one person dead. According to police reports Nydira Smith has been charged with charged with first- and third-degree murder, homicide, possession of an instrument of crime, four counts of aggravated assault, and three counts each of reckless endangerment and simple assault. According to reports Nydira Smith allegedly stabbed three people killing Jawine Evans, 21. Apparently Nydira Smith was allowed on the Lincoln University campus as her brother attends the school and was also involved in the triple stabbing. According to sources Nydira Smith was called by her brother and she would drive 90 minutes to the school armed with a knife. Once on the campus she verified her identity with security and verified her brother’s identity telling security that she was there to pick up her brother. Soon after her arrival three people were stabbed and one, Jawine Evans, tragically died from his injuries

Nydira Smith More News

Chester County police have arrested a Philadelphia woman and charged her with stabbing three Lincoln University students ― one fatally ― during a dorm-room brawl last week.

Nydira Smith, 39, was arrested Wednesday night and charged with first- and third-degree murder, homicide, possession of an instrument of crime, four counts of aggravated assault, and three counts each of reckless endangerment and simple assault, according to online court records, for allegedly stabbing Jawine Evans, 21, and two others.

Smith’s brother attends Lincoln and was involved in the fight, according to the Chester County District Attorney’s Office.

Nydira Smith, of the 7100 block of Ardleigh Street in East Mount Airy, is being held without bail and is scheduled to appear in court for a preliminary hearing March 8.

During a Thursday morning news conference at the historically Black university, law enforcement officials declined to discuss a motive for the attack but disclosed that Smith was allowed onto the gated campus because she is related to a student.

“We treat close family members as extended members of the community,” said Marc Partee, Lincoln’s director of public safety and chief of police. When Nydira Smith drove to the front gate she presented her identification, verified her brother’s information, and said she was there to pick him up, he said.

“At that point, [Nydira Smith was] allowed on the campus.”

Partee characterized Smith’s actions as “a breach of the trust” rather than a breach of security. A comprehensive review of the incident is being conducted, he said, “to see if there is anything we can do in terms of best practices across the field, with the help of all of our resources.”

Evans’ parents said they were stunned by what they called lax campus security and have hired high-profile attorney Bruce L. Castor Jr.

Chester County District Attorney Deborah Ryan said she had no doubt Nydira Smith committed first-degree murder given that she armed herself with a knife and drove an hour and a half from her home to the campus “to join in a fight with the intent to kill.”

She said the deadly violence was “a parent’s worst nightmare. We send our children on to college for them to grow, to become independent, and to become productive members of our communities. Losing a child in a senseless and tragic incident like this is devastating not only to the families involved in this incident, but to the entire Lincoln University community.”

Partee said counseling services and comfort animals were made available to students in the aftermath of the violence.

The bloody brawl erupted inside the Thurgood Marshall Living Learning Center shortly after 9 p.m. During the fight, one person wielding a knife attacked three students, resulting in the death of Evans, of Philadelphia, who was stabbed in the neck and pronounced dead at the scene.

The two injured students, Eric Dickerson, and Clifton Walker, both 22, were treated for non-life-threatening wounds at Christiana Hospital in Wilmington.

The DA’s Office said investigators recovered three videos of the incident including one that shows Evans yelling, “She stabbed me,” and clutching the right side of his neck. That video also shows the moment that Nydira Smith plunged the knife into Evans’ neck, causing him to stagger backward with a traumatic arterial bleed from his neck, the office said.

Smith is also seen making stabbing motions toward the surviving two victims, while at least six more students were in the immediate vicinity, the office said.

Investigators recovered security footage from Lincoln University that shows a maroon Infiniti registered to Smith entering the campus at 9:07 p.m. — just before the stabbing — and leaving at 9:22, Ryan’s office said.

The Philadelphia Police Department located the Infiniti on Feb. 17 and, that same day aided by Chester County detectives, executed a search warrant at a home where the car was located on the 7100 block of Ardleigh, Ryan’s office said.

Bloodstained clothing matching what Smith was seen wearing on video during the murder was recovered, as was a set of knives from the home that had one knife missing, Ryan’s office said.

Additional evidence included medical paperwork from Chestnut Hill Hospital indicating that Smith sought treatment for a laceration to her hand, and human blood was found inside the Infiniti.

Housed on a 422-acre campus in Lower Oxford Township, Lincoln was founded in 1854 and has operated as a public, state-related institution since the 1970s. Among its prominent graduates were Thurgood Marshall, the first Black person to serve on the U.S. Supreme Court; Langston Hughes, the celebrated poet who rose to fame during the Harlem Renaissance; and Kwame Nkrumah, the first president of Ghana. In 1946, Albert Einstein accepted an invitation to visit Lincoln to underscore his support for civil rights.

Despite that history, some parents complained about campus safety and faulted university officials for a lack of discipline.

“What has happened over time is they have allowed kids to party, drink, and drug,” said Carmina Taylor, a former president of the university’s parents’ association whose son graduated from Lincoln in 2016. “It’s a free-for-all.”

Meanwhile, Evans’ family and friends are preparing to bury him Friday.

Beverly Evans, his mother, said in a statement: “My husband and I are devastated over the loss of our beloved son, Jawine. We thought he would be safe on the campus of Lincoln University, and never dreamed such a terrible thing could happen there.

“We’re stunned at the lax university security, but extremely grateful to Chester County law enforcement for catching Jawine’s killer, and for DA Ryan’s comments showing she is taking a strong public stand to bring his killer to justice.”

Evans’ funeral is scheduled for Friday at the Met Philadelphia venue at 858 N. Broad St. A public viewing will begin at 8 a.m. followed by an 11 a.m. service. Interment will be at West Laurel Hill Cemetery.

https://www.inquirer.com/news/lincoln-university-stabbing-jawine-evans-nydira-smith-20220224.html