Teen pleads guilty to role in St. Paul homicide that prompted ‘no knock’ warrant at Amir Locke’s apartment complex
A teen has pleaded guilty to being an accomplice after the fact in last year’s murder of Otis Elder in St. Paul, a killing that prompted Minneapolis police to carry out a “no knock” search warrant in which Amir Locke was fatally shot by an officer.
Feysal Jama Ali, 18, of Minneapolis, entered the plea to the added charge Monday in Ramsey County District Court in connection with the killing of Otis Elder, a 38-year-old father who was shot during a suspected marijuana robbery or attempted robbery on Jan. 10, 2022. He died a half-hour later at Regions Hospital of a gunshot wound to the back.
In exchange for the plea, two counts of aiding and abetting second-degree murder will be dismissed at Ali’s sentencing, which is scheduled for March 27. Ali will be sentenced to a four-year prison term, with credit for time already served, the plea petition states.
Locke’s cousin, Mekhi Camden Speed, then 17, shot Elder as he sat in his Chevrolet Tahoe in the 500 block of North Prior Avenue, between University Avenue and Interstate 94, according to the charges.
In July, Speed was sentenced to 16 years and three months in prison after pleading guilty to aiding and abetting second-degree unintentional murder while committing an armed robbery. Speed said at his plea hearing that he went to the location to buy marijuana from Elder and that the plan changed to taking it.
Speed lived in the apartment building in downtown Minneapolis where police served search warrants on Feb. 2, 2022. Locke, 22, was not named in the search warrants and was staying on a couch in Speed’s brother’s girlfriend’s apartment when police carried out a no-knock warrant and a Minneapolis officer shot him.
Speed lived in a different unit with his mother, but had access to the other apartment, according to the criminal complaint.
Minneapolis police requested a no-knock warrant to apprehend Speed for the officers’ safety and preservation of evidence. The request for the warrant demonstrated that Speed had a history of violence and that Elder was killed with a .223-caliber firearm, which could pierce body armor.
Police body camera video showed that when police entered the apartment, announcing their presence, Locke, who was not a suspect, was stirred from a couch and emerged from under a blanket with a handgun that his family said he legally owned.
Prosecutors did not charge the officer, saying body camera video showed Locke pointing a gun, but his family has said the footage suggests he was startled awake.
Related Articles
Woman who threw puppy during Ramsey County pursuit given probation, banned from owning animals
Burnsville man identified as Minneapolis homicide victim
Authorities say Khalil Azad accidentally drowned after fleeing Robbinsdale traffic stop
Woman killed in Sunday night rollover crash on I-35W in Burnsville
Roseau pair stole electricity to run bitcoin farm, suit alleges