Four suspected gunmen in El Mula mass shooting three years ago arrested and charged

Four men who state prosecutors say wounded and killed 23 people outside a Northwest Miami-Dade banquet hall on Memorial Day Weekend three years ago, were taken into custody during early Thursday morning raids across the county and have been charged with the crimes.

In matching 9-page arrest warrants for the suspected gunmen, Miami-Dade state prosecutors and police investigators called the shootings by members of the “Bricks” retaliatory. They said the focus of the 99 spent shell casings from semi-automatic gunfire that were recovered were aimed primarily at a rap artist named “Foepack,” whose music was showcased that evening and who belonged to the rival “Back Blues” out of Opa-locka.

An image of the scene outside the El Mula Banquet Hall showing the 99 shell casings littered around the parking lot. These four arrests come three years after the tragic El Mula Banquet Hall shooting on Memorial Day 2021, which resulted in three fatalities and 20 injuries.
An image of the scene outside the El Mula Banquet Hall showing the 99 shell casings littered around the parking lot. These four arrests come three years after the tragic El Mula Banquet Hall shooting on Memorial Day 2021, which resulted in three fatalities and 20 injuries.

Miami-Dade State Attorney Katherine Fernandez Rundle, during a Thursday afternoon press conference and with the county mayor at her side, said the brazen attack that left three people dead and 20 others injured outside the El Mula banquet hall was not a random act of violence.

“It was a planned assault targeting performers and attendees,” said the state attorney. “It was a completely senseless act of violence and retaliation.”

Miami-Dade County Mayor Levine Cava, left, gives her comments regarding the arrest of four individuals linked to the mass shooting at El Mula Banquet Hall with State Attorney, Katherine Fernandez Rundle, right. These arrests come three years after the tragic shooting on Memorial Day 2021, which resulted in three fatalities and 20 injuries.
Miami-Dade County Mayor Levine Cava, left, gives her comments regarding the arrest of four individuals linked to the mass shooting at El Mula Banquet Hall with State Attorney, Katherine Fernandez Rundle, right. These arrests come three years after the tragic shooting on Memorial Day 2021, which resulted in three fatalities and 20 injuries.

Arrested and charged with three counts of first-degree murder, 20 counts of first-degree attempted murder and a single count of conspiracy to commit murder were Allen Gregory Chambers Jr., 30, Willie Zavon Hill, 27, Jacarree Brian Green, 30 and Eugene Anthony Holmes, 22.

Hill was also charged with evidence tampering. Prosecutors say he dumped a white Pathfinder in a canal, after it was publicly identified by police as a vehicle used in the shootings. Prosecutors have not said if they will seek death penalties for the four men. First-degree murder cases are ineligible for bond in Florida.

The warrant was authorized by Assistant Miami-Dade state prosecutor Khalil Quinan and lead Miami-Dade Police investigator Alexandra Turnes. It wasn’t immediately known if any of the shooting suspects had retained attorneys.

Prosecutors say rap video glorified shootings

The mass shooting at the El Mula banquet hall in Northwest Miami-Dade - of one of the worst in decades in South Florida - shocked the community and had law enforcement scrambling during a string of high-profile shootings throughout Miami-Dade that police believed to be retaliatory attacks involving rival gangs.

That same weekend a person was killed and six others injured during a shooting at a rented party space in the popular Wynwood arts district. And a few months earlier a rapper named Wavy Navy Pooh was shot and killed while driving in Kendall, in an ambush police believed could be connected to the Opa-locka gang violence.

The four arrest warrants also claim that some of the suspected shooters took part in a rap video released on YouTube called “The Pull Up.” At an earlier trial related to the shooting, prosecutors claimed the video “glorified” the incident. It was also used as evidence to help secure the only conviction associated with the shooting, so far.

Last September, jurors convicted a 20-year-old admitted lookout named Devonte Barnes of several counts of second-degree murder and second-degree attempted murder for the shooting. He was sentenced to life in prison.

Davonte Barnes, the admitted lookout at the mass shooting of 23 people at Northwest Miami-Dade’s El Mula banquet hall, was the only person charged in the crime, until Thursday’s arrests.
Davonte Barnes, the admitted lookout at the mass shooting of 23 people at Northwest Miami-Dade’s El Mula banquet hall, was the only person charged in the crime, until Thursday’s arrests.

Detectives claimed Barnes told them during an interview that the shooting stemmed from a fight between senior members of opposing Opa-locka gangs. He said after a meeting with several associates near his home, a decision was made to take out Antonio “Foepack” Jones, a local rapper whose music was released during the El Mula party.

Barnes said the shooting stemmed from a long feud between gang member Chambers, also known as “Young Savage,” and Foepack. But, Barnes said, he was under the belief that Foepack would be taken to a secluded location and shot, not that the group would open fire as dozens of people were leaving the banquet hall.

Prosecutors believe that several members of The Bricks pulled into the parking lot at El Mula, 7630 NW 186th St., just before the show ended around midnight and opened fire with high-powered rifles as patrons were leaving. The arrest warrants say the gunfire came from occupants of three vehicles, a white Nissan Pathfinder, a black Nissan Altima and a black Cadillac.

The scene captured on surveillance video as the gunfire erupted was horrific, with dozens of people leaving the party diving for cover between cars and smoke rising from the blasts. Killed in the gunfire were outside El Mula were Desmond Owens and Clayton Dillard III, both 26, and Shankquia Lechelle Peterson, 32.

A suspected shooter who got away

At one point during Thursday’s press conference Fernandez Rundle admitted to erring when she said prosecutors believe they now had all the shooters in custody. That’s because the first person taken into custody - not long after the shooting - was set free after an unforced error by the state attorney’s office.

Warneric Anthony Buckner - who has been jailed for the past year as the suspected killer of a young 6-year-old girl known as the “Tik Tok Princess,” as she left a birthday party - was freed shortly after being charged with the El Mula shootings. Prosecutors determined detectives made a mistake during Buckner’s interrogation because he had invoked his right to counsel.

One of the prosecutors who wrote a memo to the to the judge saying Buckner’s statement could be “subject to suppression,” was Michael Von Zamft, a former senior prosecutor who earlier this year was removed from a high profile murder case by a judge who took issue with phone calls he made to an alleged jailhouse snitch.

Miami-Dade Circuit Court Judge Andrea Wolfson removed Von Zamft from the re-sentencing of convicted killer and John Doe gang leader Corey Smith. Von Zamft resigned from the state attorney’s office not long after his removal from the case.

At Thursday’s press conference, Fernandez Rundle said others who may have taken part in the crime will eventually be taken into custody.

“If anyone else is involved, they will be charged,” she said.