Three Mississippi dudes to be charged with capital murder in carjack slaying of 6-year-old boy hours before kindergarten graduation
Three Mississippi guys will be charged with capital murder in the carjack slaying of a 6-year-old boy, who was set to graduate from kindergarten just hours after he was killed.
Kingston Frazier was shot numerous times, including once in the head, the Clarion-Ledger reported Friday. Cops say the vehicle was abandoned in a muddy ditch about fifteen miles north of where he was taken.
Movie from the scene and a witness helped identify suspects Byron McBride, Nineteen, D’Allen Washington, 17, and Dwan Wakefield, 17. Law enforcement sources told the Clarion-Ledger that McBride was the shooter.
Family members carry a grief-stricken Black Archie, mother of Kingston Frazier.
In the state of Mississippi, 17-year-olds accused of capital murder are attempted as adults. The three are expected to make initial court appearances on Monday.
The boy had gone missing after one a.m. Thursday morning when a man was seen on movie taking the car from the parking lot of a supermarket in Jackson.
Kingston Frazier was set to graduate from kindergarten later Thursday.
The missing Toyota Camry with his bod in the backseat was found nine hours later beside a dead-end road in the northern suburb of Gluckstadt.
Black Archie had left her son in the car, with its engine running, while she went inwards a supermarket. The heartbroken mother had to be carried by family members after she learned the news of her son’s death.
D’Allen Washington, Dwan Wakefield and Byron McBride are facing capital murder charges.
“A 6-year-old is gone,” Kingston’s cousin Kolby Irby said. “His mother has to deal with this. That’s her baby.”
The family had primarily been led to believe that Kingston had survived the carjacking after the boy’s father had posted on Facebook that he was found alive in Greenwood, according to the Clarion-Ledger. However, family members would soon get the news that Kingston was gone.
Family members react after learning that little Kingston Frazier was found dead.
“Everyone that was begging for us, that we would find Kingston alive, we want to thank everybody for that, but this is, indeed, this is, it’s hard to know that people out there are evil, that would kill a child. That’s evil,” great-aunt Velma Eddington told the Clarion-Ledger.
“That baby hadn’t done anything to him. That baby hadn’t done nothing. They could have left that child on that backseat, asleep. They didn’t have to kill him. Those people are evil. Evil. They need to find that other one before we find him . it’s evil what they did.”
A Mississippi Highway Patrol tow truck hauls away the vehicle involved in the carjacking.
The governor of Mississippi also voiced his outrage in a statement later Thursday.
“There are no words to express the anger and sadness over the loss of Kingston Frazier,” Gov. Phil Bryant said. “The innocence and life of a 6-year-old child have been taken by a horrific crime. It is time this senseless violence end. We can all plead that God will assuage the ache of Kingston’s family and friends, while we hold the guilty accountable.”
Family members react after finding out the news that Kingston Frazier did not get through the carjacking.
Wakefield was a quarterback last year at a high school in Madison County, county Superintendent Ronnie McGehee told The Clarion-Ledger. Wakefield had been dismissed from the team, the official said.
Kingston was set to graduate from kindergarten later Thursday.
“He just liked to have a lot of joy,” uncle David Archie told the Clarion-Ledger. “He was dedicated to his uncles, to his aunties and anytime he spotted any of them he would take off running to them, no matter where. If he was at my house or one of the other uncle’s or aunt’s house, he doesn’t want to go home with mom because he knows that we’re going to baby him and we’re going to have joy.
“Since the day he was able to talk he was like that,” he continued. “Just a good, fine, 6-year-old who we just can’t imagine that something like this would happen, that people would have in their heart to do that to a 6-year-old. Even if I was mad at the world, I couldn’t do this to a 6-year-old. To me, it’s hatred. There is nothing out there worth taking a 6-year-old’s life.”
Three guys face capital murder charges in carjack slay of boy, six – NY Daily News
Three Mississippi studs to be charged with capital murder in carjack slaying of 6-year-old boy hours before kindergarten graduation
Three Mississippi dudes will be charged with capital murder in the carjack slaying of a 6-year-old boy, who was set to graduate from kindergarten just hours after he was killed.
Kingston Frazier was shot numerous times, including once in the head, the Clarion-Ledger reported Friday. Cops say the vehicle was abandoned in a muddy ditch about fifteen miles north of where he was taken.
Movie from the scene and a witness helped identify suspects Byron McBride, Nineteen, D’Allen Washington, 17, and Dwan Wakefield, 17. Law enforcement sources told the Clarion-Ledger that McBride was the shooter.
Family members carry a grief-stricken Black Archie, mother of Kingston Frazier.
In the state of Mississippi, 17-year-olds accused of capital murder are attempted as adults. The three are expected to make initial court appearances on Monday.
The boy had gone missing after one a.m. Thursday morning when a man was seen on movie taking the car from the parking lot of a supermarket in Jackson.
Kingston Frazier was set to graduate from kindergarten later Thursday.
The missing Toyota Camry with his bod in the backseat was found nine hours later beside a dead-end road in the northern suburb of Gluckstadt.
Black Archie had left her son in the car, with its engine running, while she went inwards a supermarket. The heartbroken mother had to be carried by family members after she learned the news of her son’s death.
D’Allen Washington, Dwan Wakefield and Byron McBride are facing capital murder charges.
“A 6-year-old is gone,” Kingston’s cousin Kolby Irby said. “His mother has to deal with this. That’s her baby.”
The family had originally been led to believe that Kingston had survived the carjacking after the boy’s father had posted on Facebook that he was found alive in Greenwood, according to the Clarion-Ledger. However, family members would soon get the news that Kingston was gone.
Family members react after learning that little Kingston Frazier was found dead.
“Everyone that was asking for us, that we would find Kingston alive, we want to thank everybody for that, but this is, indeed, this is, it’s hard to know that people out there are evil, that would kill a child. That’s evil,” great-aunt Velma Eddington told the Clarion-Ledger.
“That baby hadn’t done anything to him. That baby hadn’t done nothing. They could have left that child on that backseat, asleep. They didn’t have to kill him. Those people are evil. Evil. They need to find that other one before we find him . it’s evil what they did.”
A Mississippi Highway Patrol tow truck hauls away the vehicle involved in the carjacking.
The governor of Mississippi also voiced his outrage in a statement later Thursday.
“There are no words to express the anger and sadness over the loss of Kingston Frazier,” Gov. Phil Bryant said. “The innocence and life of a 6-year-old child have been taken by a horrific crime. It is time this senseless violence end. We can all plead that God will assuage the ache of Kingston’s family and friends, while we hold the guilty accountable.”
Family members react after finding out the news that Kingston Frazier did not get through the carjacking.
Wakefield was a quarterback last year at a high school in Madison County, county Superintendent Ronnie McGehee told The Clarion-Ledger. Wakefield had been dismissed from the team, the official said.
Kingston was set to graduate from kindergarten later Thursday.
“He just liked to have a lot of joy,” uncle David Archie told the Clarion-Ledger. “He was dedicated to his uncles, to his aunties and anytime he witnessed any of them he would take off running to them, no matter where. If he was at my house or one of the other uncle’s or aunt’s house, he doesn’t want to go home with mom because he knows that we’re going to baby him and we’re going to have joy.
“Since the day he was able to talk he was like that,” he continued. “Just a excellent, fine, 6-year-old who we just can’t imagine that something like this would happen, that people would have in their heart to do that to a 6-year-old. Even if I was mad at the world, I couldn’t do this to a 6-year-old. To me, it’s hatred. There is nothing out there worth taking a 6-year-old’s life.”
Three dudes face capital murder charges in carjack slay of boy, six – NY Daily News
Three Mississippi dudes to be charged with capital murder in carjack slaying of 6-year-old boy hours before kindergarten graduation
Three Mississippi fellows will be charged with capital murder in the carjack slaying of a 6-year-old boy, who was set to graduate from kindergarten just hours after he was killed.
Kingston Frazier was shot numerous times, including once in the head, the Clarion-Ledger reported Friday. Cops say the vehicle was abandoned in a muddy ditch about fifteen miles north of where he was taken.
Movie from the scene and a witness helped identify suspects Byron McBride, Nineteen, D’Allen Washington, 17, and Dwan Wakefield, 17. Law enforcement sources told the Clarion-Ledger that McBride was the shooter.
Family members carry a grief-stricken Black Archie, mother of Kingston Frazier.
In the state of Mississippi, 17-year-olds accused of capital murder are attempted as adults. The three are expected to make initial court appearances on Monday.
The boy had gone missing after one a.m. Thursday morning when a man was seen on movie taking the car from the parking lot of a supermarket in Jackson.
Kingston Frazier was set to graduate from kindergarten later Thursday.
The missing Toyota Camry with his assets in the backseat was found nine hours later beside a dead-end road in the northern suburb of Gluckstadt.
Black Archie had left her son in the car, with its engine running, while she went inwards a supermarket. The heartbroken mother had to be carried by family members after she learned the news of her son’s death.
D’Allen Washington, Dwan Wakefield and Byron McBride are facing capital murder charges.
“A 6-year-old is gone,” Kingston’s cousin Kolby Irby said. “His mother has to deal with this. That’s her baby.”
The family had originally been led to believe that Kingston had survived the carjacking after the boy’s father had posted on Facebook that he was found alive in Greenwood, according to the Clarion-Ledger. However, family members would soon get the news that Kingston was gone.
Family members react after learning that little Kingston Frazier was found dead.
“Everyone that was begging for us, that we would find Kingston alive, we want to thank everybody for that, but this is, truly, this is, it’s hard to know that people out there are evil, that would kill a child. That’s evil,” great-aunt Velma Eddington told the Clarion-Ledger.
“That baby hadn’t done anything to him. That baby hadn’t done nothing. They could have left that child on that backseat, asleep. They didn’t have to kill him. Those people are evil. Evil. They need to find that other one before we find him . it’s evil what they did.”
A Mississippi Highway Patrol tow truck hauls away the vehicle involved in the carjacking.
The governor of Mississippi also voiced his outrage in a statement later Thursday.
“There are no words to express the anger and sadness over the loss of Kingston Frazier,” Gov. Phil Bryant said. “The innocence and life of a 6-year-old child have been taken by a horrific crime. It is time this senseless violence end. We can all beg that God will assuage the ache of Kingston’s family and friends, while we hold the guilty accountable.”
Family members react after finding out the news that Kingston Frazier did not sustain the carjacking.
Wakefield was a quarterback last year at a high school in Madison County, county Superintendent Ronnie McGehee told The Clarion-Ledger. Wakefield had been dismissed from the team, the official said.
Kingston was set to graduate from kindergarten later Thursday.
“He just liked to have a lot of joy,” uncle David Archie told the Clarion-Ledger. “He was dedicated to his uncles, to his aunties and anytime he spotted any of them he would take off running to them, no matter where. If he was at my house or one of the other uncle’s or aunt’s house, he doesn’t want to go home with mom because he knows that we’re going to baby him and we’re going to have joy.
“Since the day he was able to talk he was like that,” he continued. “Just a superb, superb, 6-year-old who we just can’t imagine that something like this would happen, that people would have in their heart to do that to a 6-year-old. Even if I was mad at the world, I couldn’t do this to a 6-year-old. To me, it’s hatred. There is nothing out there worth taking a 6-year-old’s life.”