Chattanooga Times Free Press

Slaying suspect pleads to drug charge

- BY ZACK PETERSON STAFF WRITER

A 23-year-old man police suspect of killing a well-known gang leader pleaded guilty to an unrelated drug charge Thursday in federal court.

Jermichael Brooks hasn’t been charged in the slaying of Jumoke Johnson, 23, or Christophe­r Woodard, 20, who were shot from the back seat of a car as they traveled down East 12th Street on Jan. 20. Three sources told the Times Free Press in January that Brooks is the prime suspect in the double homicide, which may have been motivated by a cheating girlfriend.

So far, some of the evidence that has been tested doesn’t put the weapon used in the killings in Brooks’ hand at all. But he faces up to 20 years in prison, three years of supervised release and a $100 court fee on the federal drug charge, which he picked up in East Chattanoog­a three days after the double homicide.

Authoritie­s already had a warrant out for Brooks’ arrest in January for violating probation on an unrelated case in state court, court records show.

He and an acquaintan­ce, Marquis McReynolds, each were sent to the Hamilton County Jail on Jan. 23 after local and federal agents spotted them in a stolen Honda Accord on Highway 58 and chased them across town. When the car crashed into a ditch near 2200 Monroe St., investigat­ors found two firearms and some cocaine inside.

Investigat­ors ran one firearm that Brooks said belonged to him through the National Integrated Ballistic Informatio­n Network, a tool that can match particular shell casings to particular guns, similar to the way authoritie­s track fingerprin­ts.

But that gun didn’t return any connection to the Johnson and Woodard slayings, police said Thursday.

McReynolds since has pleaded guilty to having two bullets in his pocket while being a felon, and he will be sentenced July 28, court records show.

Police Sgt. Josh May, who has been building Chattanoog­a’s ballistic informatio­n network program for the last six

months, said the second firearm collected from the Honda Accord has yet to be tested. He wants to test 450 of the 3,200 guns police have recovered since 2013 to connect the dots among victims, witnesses and unsolved shootings. The one used to kill Johnson and Woodard, for instance, could be among them.

“It’s possible we have the gun,” May said, “but it’s a process.”

There are no witnesses to the killing, but police have another forensic angle: They swabbed the car from the 12th Street incident for DNA samples and sent them to the Tennessee Bureau of Investigat­ion in Nashville. May said Brooks told police he was inside the vehicle that night, but that he was dropped off by somebody before the shooting. He didn’t name that person, and police are continuing to look at whatever names come up in their investigat­ion, May said.

“But since it’s still an ongoing investigat­ion, we can’t speak to the specifics of what we received from [Chattanoog­a police],” TBI spokeswoma­n Susan Niland wrote in an email Thursday.

Attorney Lee Davis, who is representi­ng Brooks in his federal case, said state and federal authoritie­s haven’t been able to verify that his client pulled the trigger.

“We do not think he was involved in that,” Davis said. “It’s just some jailhouse rumor, and he damn near lost his eyesight over it.”

Brooks was beaten by other inmates in jail five days after he was federally indicted on two charges from the chase: being a felon in possession of a firearm and intent to distribute the cocaine mixture. The gun charge was dropped as part of the plea agreement, Davis said.

Brooks’ collarbone was broken, his eyes severely injured and his shoulders bruised, sources said at the time. The beating was so bad his thendefens­e attorney, Giles Jones, said he had to read the indictment to Brooks because the 23-year-old couldn’t see during his arraignmen­t — nearly two weeks after the assault.

Brooks still hasn’t fully recovered.

“How’s your vision at this point?” U.S. Magistrate Judge Christophe­r Steger asked Thursday before accepting the plea.

Brooks bent down to speak into the podium microphone. “It’s getting better,” he said. “Are you able to see out of both eyes?” Steger asked. “Just one eye,” Brooks said. He will be sentenced Sept. 22 at 2 p.m.

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Jermichael Brooks

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