Chattanooga Times Free Press

Prosecutio­n says retaliatio­n played a role in July slaying

- STAFF WRITER BY ZACK PETERSON

Here’s what prosecutor­s believe happened to Jeremy Clark:

On July 29, the 28-yearold went to JJ’s Lounge on Glass Street. He chatted with a few friends, walked over to the driver’s side of a white Dodge Challenger around 1 a.m., and was then shot to death by Adrian Nixon for allegedly murdering a rival gang member earlier that month.

It made sense, prosecutor Cameron Williams said Tuesday in Hamilton County General Sessions Court.

Clark was a validated member of the Gangster Disciples, he said. Clark was also the primary suspect in the homicide of Alex Freeman, a 28-year-old man shot to death on Woodmore Lane on July 5. Inside the vehicle Nixon drove on July 29, investigat­ors found a brochure for Freeman’s funeral. Plus, if Nixon’s story was true, and another man had reached through the passenger window and opened fire on Clark that night, investigat­ors would have found shell cases inside the car.

“Not outside on the ground,” Williams said to Judge Clarence Shattuck. “Mr. Nixon states that someone pointed a gun through the passenger window, fired multiple shots, and that just

“Mr. Nixon states that someone pointed a gun through the passenger window, fired multiple shots, and that just does not jive with forensic evidence.” — CAMERON WILLIAMS, PROSECUTOR

does not jive with forensic evidence.”

Shattuck ultimately sent Nixon’s criminal homicide, reckless endangerme­nt, aggravated assault, and firearm possession charges to the grand jury. He also sliced Nixon’s total bond in half to $250,000.

During the hearing, defense attorney Bill Speek argued prosecutor­s never proved his client’s motivation.

“He is not a validated gang member,” Speek said of Nixon. “It doesn’t even make sense that he would drive in here and shoot somebody. There’s cameras, people walking around. But the irony is, those cameras and people don’t even say he did it.”

Speek said the state called four eyewitness­es, and none of them could definitive­ly say Nixon had a gun or fired it. One witness said he didn’t see anybody in the front seat with Nixon, but he couldn’t be sure.

Patrick Brown, one of Nixon’s cousins, said he walked to JJ’s Lounge that night, saw Nixon’s car and walked over to say hello. When Clark, also known as “Blue” came up, Brown said he turned away to let them talk but stayed nearby.

There was no cussing, no arguing, Brown said.

“You’re 18 inches from Mr. Nixon,” Speek asked. “Did you see him with a gun in his hand? Did you see him act like he had a gun in his hand? Did you see Adrian Nixon shoot Mr. Blue?”

Brown said no to every question.

After the shots, Brown said he ran away and had a friend pick him up. When Williams, the prosecutor, asked who that friend was, Brown wouldn’t say.

Nixon also left the scene, witnesses said.

Then, at some point in the next 24-hour window, Brown said he met with Nixon and that friend before heading into the Chattanoog­a Police Department’s service center on Amnicola Highway. But his statements to police didn’t match up to his testimony in court, Williams said.

“I’m glad I’m not sitting on a jury at this point,” Shattuck said. “But … what bothers me is, somebody reached through, shot, and there’s no shells in the vehicle whatsoever. It bothers me, too, that [Nixon] didn’t stay there and say, ‘Look, look at my car right now. I had nothing to do with this.’ I wish [Nixon] had stayed there. I wish Patrick had stayed there.”

Contact staff writer Zack Peterson at zpeterson@times freepress.com or 423-7576347. Follow him on Twitter @zackpeters­on918.

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Adrian Nixon

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