The Reporter (Vacaville)

Trial date still pending in 2017 murder-robbery case in Suisun City

- By Richard Bammer rbammer@thereporte­r.com Contact Richard Bammer at (707) 453-8164.

Previously scheduled to face a jury on Sept. 15, two men charged with the murder and robbery of a 21-yearold Solano man during a marijuana deal that took a tragic turn three years ago in Suisun City will instead return to court in early 2021 to set a new trial date.

Derrick Keith Dogan Jr., 38, of Fairfield, and Alfie Broussard, 39, of Elk Grove, were scheduled to appear Monday in Department 1 for a readiness conference and a trial setting, but Judge Jeffrey C. Kauffman has ordered them to return at 8:30 a.m. Jan. 13 for the same proceeding­s in the Justice Center in Fairfield.

After a November 2019 preliminar­y hearing, Kauffman described the two men as “major participan­ts” in a first-degree murder who “showed a reckless disregard for human life,” echoing statements made shortly before by Deputy District Attorney Melainee Collins, who leads the prosecutio­n.

If convicted of the charges at trial, the pair could face 25 years to life, plus more time for the robbery charge and an enhancemen­t for use of a firearm.

Dogan and Broussard have remained in Solano County Jail without bail since their arrests on June 19, 2018. They are accused of shooting and killing Armani Harper-Reed on Nov. 3, 2017, in the parking lot of a Chevron gas station in the 2100 block of Anderson Drive.

Sean Swartz, a deputy public defender in the Alternate Public Defender’s Office, represents Dogan. Eileen Burke, a criminal defense attorney from San Anselmo, represents Broussard.

During the four- day preliminar­y hearing, cellphone data and a tattoo were among key pieces of evidence.

In her final statements, Collins argued for a finding of first-degree murder and robbery with the firearm enhancemen­t, saying both were major participan­ts in the alleged crime. She noted that text messages and cellphone tower records indicated the two men arranged for the marijuana sale on Nov. 3, informatio­n that included the amount of the drug, two to three pounds, and its cost, about $1,500.

Collins asserted the two men had planned a robbery in advance — “From the get-go,” she said — and later described how the suspects and Harper-Reed were positioned outside their vehicles at the moment several shots were fired.

Dogan fired a warning shot, she said, which was followed by two more shots allegedly by Broussard, one of which is believed to have entered Harper-Reed’s back and pierced an artery, causing internal bleeding and his death.

Additional­ly, crime scene investigat­ors found Dogan’s DNA inside the vehicle Harper-Reed drove to the gas station, a white Chevrolet Impala.

“This was a planned robbery,” Collins reiterated, adding that the two defendants showed “a reckless disregard for human life.”

In rebuttal, Swartz countered there was no evidence “that a planned robbery was going to take place” and insufficie­nt evidence to indicate that Dogan showed a reckless disregard for human life.

Among her final statements, Burke asserted that there was no evidence to ascertain who fired the fatal bullet that killed HarperReed. Additional­ly, she said there was “substantia­l evidence” the victim was armed, suggesting self-defense.

The tipping point in the hearing appeared to come when a Suisun City police detective at the time offered cellphone and cell tower data, among other things, a geolocatio­n that placed Dogan and Broussard in the gas station area and roughly at the time of the crime.

A police investigat­or testified that Harper-Reed’s girlfriend, who was with the victim when he was shot and killed, told him the suspects were “two big Black guys, heavy-set.” Dogan and Broussard are large men, with Broussard at 6 feet 1 inch tall, weighing 235 pounds; and Dogan at 5 feet 8 inches and 240 pounds, according to a police report.

After speaking with the girlfriend, the investigat­or sought out surveillan­ce camera video at the gas station and at a nearby Popeyes restaurant, seeing evidence of the suspects’ vehicle, a black Dodge Challenger, with fog lights and headlights on, pull into the station and park near Harper-Reed’s Impala.

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