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17-year-old charged in homicide that prompted no-knock warrant, Amir Locke's killing by Minneapolis police - Minneapolis Star Tribune

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A 17-year-old boy has been charged with second-degree murder in connection with the Jan. 10 shooting death of a 38-year-old man — the underlying case behind a no-knock warrant and predawn Minneapolis police raid last week that killed 22-year-old Amir Locke.

Ramsey County prosecutors filed a juvenile petition charging Mekhi C. Speed, of Minneapolis, with two counts of second-degree murder, and are seeking to certify him to be tried as an adult.

Speed and Locke are cousins, according to the charging document, which revealed that Speed was living in a different unit of the Bolero Flats Apartment Homes, at 1117 S. Marquette Av., in downtown Minneapolis but also had access to the apartment where police barged in on Feb. 2 and shot Locke as he held a gun.

Officers responded to a 911 call in St. Paul's Hamline-Midway neighborhood last month, where they found Otis R. Elder in the street with a gunshot wound to the back outside a music recording studio on the 500 block of N. Prior Avenue. He died about 30 minutes later at Regions Hospital. A witness who described himself as Elder's best friend said he heard the shooting and did not know who would have shot him, as he lived in Minneapolis with his young child and "did not have a problem with anyone."

Police were told by someone who was on the phone with Elder in the moments before he was shot that "it sounded like Elder was conducting a drug transaction [and] the phone call then abruptly ended," the charges against Speed read.

As their investigation progressed last week, St. Paul police filed standard applications for search warrant affidavits for three Bolero Flats apartments. But detectives were forced to resubmit the requests after Minneapolis police insisted on a no-knock entry.

MPD would not have agreed to execute the search in its jurisdiction otherwise, according to a law enforcement source who spoke on the condition of anonymity. St. Paul police rarely execute no-knock warrants because they are considered high-risk. The capital city police force has not served such a warrant since 2016, said department spokesman Steve Linders.

Locke, who was not a target of the investigation, was sleeping in the apartment of relatives when members of a Minneapolis police SWAT team burst in shortly before 7 a.m.

Footage from one of the officers' body cameras showed police quietly unlocking the apartment door with a key before barging inside, yelling "Search warrant!" as Locke lay under a blanket on the couch. An officer kicked the couch, Locke stirred, holding a firearm in his right hand. He was shot by officer Mark Hanneman within seconds.

The legal team representing the Locke family, led by civil rights attorney Ben Crump, said in a statement the description of the raid mentioned in the charges "confirms that Amir was never a target of that investigation or those search warrants. ... Amir was an innocent young man of a raid gone terribly gone, who is now the latest statistic and victim of the dangerous and intrusive no-knock warrant techniques that must be banned."

Along with prosecutors detailing their case in Elder's death, they also spelled out in the charging document some of the circumstances of the raid that ended with Locke being killed:

In the seventh-floor apartment where Locke was shot were Speed's brother and the brother's girlfriend. Officers seized clothing that police believe Speed was wearing at some point on the night Elder was shot, the gun belonging to Locke and marijuana.

In the search of a second apartment, this one on the 14th floor and where Speed lived with his mother, officers seized a hat that police suspect Speed was wearing when he shot Elder and other items associated with two people believed to be with Speed soon after the Jan. 10 shooting.

The search of the third apartment, also on the 14th floor and associated with a friend of Speed's, turned up "a large amount of marijuana."

Law enforcement officers began looking for Speed on Jan. 24, about two weeks after Elder's killing. They kept tabs on places where he was known to frequent and stayed in touch with his mother and his probation officer.

On Sunday, officers located Speed in Winona, where he tried to flee capture. One officer grabbed the teen's jacket. Speed wriggled out of the jacket but was soon apprehended. Inside the jacket was a loaded firearm. Police believe that was the jacket that Speed was wearing when he shot Elder.

Speed, who turns 18 in about a month, declined to speak with investigators. The charges did not elaborate on what led him to Winona, nearly 120 miles south of Minneapolis, or how long he had been there.

At the time of the homicide, court records show that Speed remained on supervised probation in Hennepin County for shooting a teenager in the leg outside a Brooklyn Park gas station in September of 2020.

Judge Jeannice Reding placed Speed on extended juvenile jurisdiction – a form of blended sentencing typically reserved for violent juvenile offenses. In exchange for pleading guilty to felony second-degree assault with a deadly weapon, Reding stayed a three-year adult prison sentence.

Speed spent at least six months at West Central Regional Juvenile Center in Moorhead, where he was required to participate in trauma therapy and undergo a psychological assessment. Records show he was eventually released to his mother on electronic home monitoring, with furloughs for school, in October 2021.

About three months later, police believe, Speed shot Elder during an attempted robbery.

"That little boy stole my brother's life," his younger sister, Motika Elder, told the Star Tribune. "He never did nothing wrong to anyone. There was no reason for him to be killed."

A St. Paul investigator called the Elder family Tuesday morning to inform them of the arrest, she said, noting that Speed didn't appear to know Elder before the fatal encounter. A police spokesman declined to comment on that — or whether any suspects remain at large, citing an active investigation.

"O – as most of you knew him – absolutely loved these streets of St. Paul," his cousin, April Fleming, eulogized at his funeral last month. "It's gut-wrenching to know that these same streets took him away from us."

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