El Dorado News-Times

Little Rock club performer faces weapons charge

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LITTLE ROCK (AP) — A rapper shot someone in the neck days before performing at a concert in Little Rock that was the site of a shooting that left 28 people injured, federal prosecutor­s said Monday.

U.S. Attorney's Office spokeswoma­n Paulette Chappelle said Ricky Hampton, also known as Finese 2 Tymes, screamed at a person he believed was blocking his way on June 25 as Hampton was trying to leave Club Envy in Forrest City, Arkansas.

Chappelle said the Memphis, Tennessee, rapper entered his vehicle and continued screaming at the person, who was driving another vehicle before firing an "AK-style pistol," shattering the rear window and striking the person in the neck.

Then Saturday, a shooting at Little Rock's Power Ultra Lounge where Hampton was performing left 28 people hurt.

Hampton was arrested about 24 hours later in Alabama on outstandin­g charges of aggravated assault with a gun out of Forrest City in eastern Arkansas, the U.S. Marshals Service said.

Cliff LaBarge with the U.S. Marshal's Service in Alabama said two handguns and an assault rifle were seized from the Mercedes in which Hampton and another man were riding at the time of their early Sunday arrest. Hampton was about to perform at an Alabama club when he was taken into custody.

According to a news release from the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Eastern District of Arkansas, a complaint has been filed against Hampton for being a felon in the possession of firearms. He remained in jail without bond in Birmingham Monday morning.

911 calls from the Little Rock shooting were released Monday to The Associated Press via an open records request, and show a panicked, chaotic scene after shots were fired inside the nightclub. More than a dozen people called 911 after the shooting, and screams could be heard in the background in some calls.

No one could identify the shooter when asked by 911 operators. When asked if she saw the shooter, one woman replied: "No, I was at the back of the club but I know the rappers that came in, they had guns."

The volley of gunfire inside the Power Ultra Lounge came so fast that investigat­ors believe multiple people had to have been involved. Police Chief Kenton Buckner credited quick work by first responders for there being no fatalities.

Little Rock police said in a statement Monday that they have interviewe­d Hampton in Alabama, and that the investigat­ion is ongoing.

A message posted on the rapper's Facebook page Saturday offered thoughts and prayers for those injured: "THE VIOLENCE IS NOT FOR THE CLUB PEOPLE. WE ALL COME WITH 1 MOTIVE AT THE END OF THE DAY, AND THATS TO HAVE FUN."

Attorney Ronald L. Davis, Jr. representi­ng Power Ultra Lounge owner Herman Lewis said security protocol must not have followed protocol and that hired security guards are supposed to check everyone who enters the venue by hand and with magnetic wands.

Little Rock Police have released reports from 33 times they've responded to the club's address since April 2016, including shots fired, aggravated assault and theft complaints.

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