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D.A. Weirich Bites the Bullet on Gun Crime

The outlook for a hotly contested 2022 district attorney general’s race was intensified this week by an announcement from former Shelby County Commissioner and University of Memphis law professor Steve Mulroy that he very likely would seek the Democratic nomination to oppose the re-election of incumbent Amy Weirich, a Republican.

Mulroy would thereby become the second Democrat in the race, along with the already declared Linda Harris.

Much of the contest, in either eventuality, would hinge on party-line issues. But in a luncheon address last week to members of the Rotary Club of Memphis, Weirich demonstrated why she is credited with having substantial crossover potential.

She bit the bullet on an issue on which her GOP party-mates in state government can be — and have been — seriously faulted.

“Gun crime is top-of-mind everywhere we go,” said Weirich to the Rotarians. Referring to figures on a PowerPoint slide, she noted, “We are up probably over 21 percent.”

She continued: “Now as we sit here today as compared to when that chart was made, but gun crime is prevalent and of great concern. One of the contributing factors is legislation that was passed in 2014.”

This was the guns-in-cars bill, passed by the General Assembly’s Republican majority and allowed to become law by Republican Governor Bill Haslam. “Back in 2010, we had less than 300 guns stolen from cars,” Weirich said.

Referring again to the slide, she said, “You can see, as of October 20, 2021, we’ve had 1,286. Now that it is November 30, I would imagine that the figures are probably close to 1,400 guns stolen from cars.”

As she reminded her auditors, “When guns-in-cars legislation passed in 2014, it enabled people to travel around with guns in their cars without a special permit. And that meant more guns in cars on the street.

“It’s susceptible to theft. And people that are stealing guns are not doing so to do anything altruistic with it, correct? They’re doing it to continue to victimize citizens in our community, to continue to prey on innocent people. So that’s kind of what the landscape is right now.”

Moments later she dilated further, “One of our senators a few weeks ago made the comment about how far we’ve come economically as a state because everybody in the former governor’s [Haslam’s] administration was focused on turning that economic engine around.

“And it occurred to me just like if we had that same focus for public safety, just think what we could do, if everyone in Nashville and beyond was focused on victims of crime and doing everything we can to respect the victims of crime, to hold offenders accountable, and to treat public safety as the number-one priority that it should be.”

When audience members raised concerns about potential gun massacres occurring in Tennessee, Weirich said, “The answer to everyone’s nightmare is yes, it could very well happen here, particularly since the governor [current GOP Governor Bill Lee] signed into law permitless carry.

“And so now it takes away the ability in law enforcement to come up and ask to see your permit, if you are openly carrying in this restaurant or walking down the street or going into Home Depot. And that is an issue for law enforcement and will continue to be an issue.”

She would add, on the prospect of corrective action by the General Assembly, “I don’t know of any common sense legislation that’s floating around.”

Credit Weirich, on that issue, for some nonpartisan candor.

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Two Fatal Shooting Cases Move in Courts

Two 2019 fatal shooting cases moved through courts in Memphis recently, one described as “random” and “unprovoked” and another involving a shopkeeper and a shoplifter. 

Shelby County District Attorney General Amy Weirich’s office shared details of both last week. 

Last week, a jury convicted Demarcus Z. Wooten, 21, on murder and gun charges, earning him an automatic life sentence. He will be sentenced formally on all charges in February. 

Court testimony put Wooten in the back seat of a car with several others in the early-morning hours of June 12th, 2019. At Mt. Moriah and Willow, Wooten shot at another motorist in a car, shattering the car’s window and hitting its door. The driver was not injured. Minutes later, the car stopped at a traffic light at Mt. Moriah and Quince. 

Wooten laughed and said, ‘Look at his body.’ 

“Witnesses said that for no apparent reason Wooten shot 49-year-old Willie C. Gandy in the back as he crossed the street in the crosswalk in front of the car,” reads a statement from Weirich’s office. “Witnesses said the car’s driver continued on Mt. Moriah, but that Wooten told the driver to make a u-turn and that as they passed the shooting scene Wooten laughed and said, ‘Look at his body.’ 

“When a witness texted him later asking about the shooting, Wooten, a gang member whose nickname is Hot Head, replied ‘He dead’ in a return text with a smiling emoji.”

Also last week, a grand jury indicted Charles Kalb, 59, a Memphis store owner, after he fatally shot Lamorris Robinson, 33, in the back for attempting to steal a chainsaw. The jury indicted Kalb on first-degree murder charges and possession of a prohibited sawed-off shotgun. He is free on $1 million bond. 

The store owner is free on $1M bond but faces first-degree murder charges.

At around 1:30 p.m. on October 16, 2019, Kalb said he saw Robinson pick up a chainsaw and run from his store, Mid-South Small Engines, in the 2600 block of Mt. Moriah. Surveillance video shows Kalb grab a shotgun from under the counter, run after the suspect, and shoot him in the back outside the store. Robinson was later pronounced dead at a hospital.  

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Parents Indicted After Accidental Shooting

The office of Shelby County District Attorney General Amy Weirich announced today that Latria Johnson, 28, and her boyfriend Lindsey Williams, 27, have been indicted on charges of criminally negligent homicide and reckless endangerment following the accidental shooting death of 9-year-old Xavier Jackson by his 13-year-old cousin, the son of the couple. 

District Attorney Amy Weirich

The shooting occurred in March at the Canterbury Woods Apartments near Cordova while the couple were out shopping.

Inside the apartment, the unnamed 13-year-old picked up his father’s loaded handgun from the master bedroom. The gun discharged accidentally striking Jackson in the face and killing him. The gun had been left unattended and unsecured.

The case is being handled by Stacy McEndree of the District Attorney’s Vertical Team 6, which prosecutes cases in General Sessions Division 15 and in Criminal Court Division 10.