Two teenagers charged with homicide in occasion mass capturing
DADEVILLE, Ala. – Two brothers have been arrested and charged with homicide in connection to a mass shooting at a Sweet 16 party in Alabama that killed 4 folks and wounded dozens extra, officers introduced Wednesday.
Ty Reik McCullough, 17, and Travis McCullough, 16, each of Tuskegee, have each been charged with 4 counts of reckless homicide within the Saturday capturing at a Dadeville celebration that additionally injured 32, officers mentioned at a press convention.
The teenagers have been arrested Tuesday in close by Macon County. They’re being charged as adults, District Legal professional Mike Segrest mentioned. Each will get a bond listening to inside 72 hours, and the state plans to request no bond, officers mentioned.
Reckless homicide is a Class A felony with a punishment vary of 10 to 99 years in jail. In Alabama, juveniles 16 and older are mechanically charged as adults for such felonies.
Alabama capturing:Birthday girl begged dying brother to ‘stay with me’
4 victims of Dadeville mass capturing stay in essential situation
4 individuals who have been shot on the occasion are in essential situation, Segrest mentioned. “We’re going to verify each a kind of victims has justice, and never simply the deceased,” Segrest mentioned.
Regulation enforcement officers made the announcement on the steps of the Tallapoosa County Courthouse, a block from the location of the capturing. Sgt. Jeremy Burkett of the Alabama Regulation Enforcement Company declined to reply questions on why the general public was not initially knowledgeable about potential suspects at massive.
Investigators mentioned the capturing started shortly after 10:30 p.m. Saturday on the Mahogany Masterpiece dance studio in Dadeville, a city of roughly 3,200 folks about 57 miles northeast of Montgomery. Police haven’t mentioned what led to the capturing.
Late Monday, ALEA mentioned pistol-caliber empty shell casings have been recovered on the scene and that no high-powered rifle spherical empty shell casings have been discovered.
Murder charges ‘the tip of the iceberg’
The counts the suspects face are for the four fatalities, Segrest said. More charges are likely, including charges related to the 32 victims who were injured, officials said.
“These arrests are the tip of the iceberg, the very beginning,” Dadeville police Chief Johnathan Floyd said. “We have one chance to get it right. We are going to make sure, and be very slow and very methodical. Making an arrest isn’t the finish line.”
A small crowd residents gathered on the courthouse lawn and nearby to hear the press conference. Many went away disappointed.
“I’m glad they made two arrests. I really am,” said Ray Hale. “But I want to know – are they looking for anybody else? And, if so, how many? I understand not giving details, with the work going on and all, but we need to know if they are looking for anybody else.”
Who were the victims at Alabama birthday party shooting?
Tallapoosa County Coroner Mike Knox on Monday confirmed the identities of the four people who were killed. They were Dadeville High School seniors Philstavious “Phil” Dowdell, 18, and Shaunkivia “Keke” Smith, 17; Opelika native and musician Marsiah “Siah” Collins, 19; and Dadeville native Corbin Holston, 23.
Dowdell, a star athlete recruited to play college football, was the birthday girl’s brother, and he died in his sister’s arms.
Burkett asked other witnesses who attended the party to come forward with information.

Dadeville, Alabama, shooting comes after Nashville, Louisville killings
The shooting in Dadeville was the 160th mass shooting in the country this year, according to the nonprofit Gun Violence Archive, which tracks all mass shootings, defined as a shooting in which at least four victims are hit by gunfire.
The killing followed mass shootings at a small, private Christian school in Nashville, Tennessee, and at a bank in Louisville, Kentucky. This week, two shootings in Maine – one on a busy interstate – left 4 folks lifeless and three injured.
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Roney reported from Dadeville, Alabama. Hauck reported from Chicago.
