4 charged in fatal shooting of Antonio Smith, 9, in Grand Crossing

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Friday, September 19, 2014
4 charged in fatal shooting of Chicago boy, 9
Four men have been charged in the August shooting death of a 9-year-old Chicago boy, police said.

CHICAGO (WLS) -- Four men have been charged in the shooting death of a 9-year-old Chicago boy last month, police said.

Antonio Smith was shot multiple times in the backyard of a residence in the Grand Crossing neighborhood on August 20.

Derrick Allmon, 19, Jabari Williams, 22, and Michael D. Baker, 19, are charged with murder in connection with 9-year-old Antonio Smith's shooting death in August.

On Friday, Chicago Police Supt. Garry McCarthy announced murder charges against Derrick Allmon, 19, Jabari Williams, 22, and Michael D. Baker, 19, in connection with Smith's death. Williams was also charged with aggravated unlawful use of a weapon without an FOID card. Murder charges facing Paris Denard, 19, were announced Saturday morning.

Police said the four men are members of the same gang who were driving around, looking to shoot members of a rival gang when they spotted two of them and stopped.

"Williams handed Allmon the handgun and instructed him to shoot the two suspected rival gang members. As Allmon approached his intended targets on foot, he came across Antonio Smith in the rear yard of the residence. Believing that Antonio Smith was yelling a warning to his intended victims, Allmon shot Antonio Smith multiple times, wounding him fatally. As Allmon fled the scene, he discarded the murder weapon, the handgun, into a nearby sewer from which it was recovered," said McCarthy.

Gangs have long used youngsters as lookouts, or shorties, who will forewarn when rivals approach. Antonio Smith was not affiliated with any gang, but police said that his killer thought that he was.

"Basically, when you shoot somebody four times or more, it's an execution. Executing a 9-year-old kid, what the hell kind of a day is that?" said Father Michael Pfleger, St. Sabina Church.

McCarthy said neighbors aided the investigation by providing police initially with gang nicknames.

Allmon, the alleged shooter, was arrested and convicted for unlawful use of a weapon in 2012. He was sentenced to three years but served only one, then was released on parole.

Police said they have traced the murder weapon from Indiana and said it is tentatively linked to two other shootings, perhaps a murder.