New York Daily News

Rapper faces prison in ’21 B’klyn shooting

- BY THOMAS TRACY AND ELIZABETH KEOGH

An aspiring Brooklyn drill rapper who refused to cooperate with detectives after his year-old son was fatally shot by gangbanger­s who targeted the dad is back in trouble with the law.

Self-identified Crip gang member Anthony Hennis is facing federal prison time for possession of gun ammunition related to an April 2021 Brooklyn shooting, the U.S. attorney’s office for the Eastern District of New York said.

Hennis fired off shots at the corner of Livonia and Van Siclen Aves. in East New York, sending panicked bystanders on the busy street running, prosecutor­s charged. In July 2021, a grand jury indicted him on the ammo charge.

He pleaded guilty to felony possession of a firearm in February and is scheduled to be sentenced in Brooklyn Federal Court on Monday.

Hennis left detectives exasperate­d in September 2013 after his son Antiq was killed by gunfire as Hennis pushed the tot in a stroller across a Brownsvill­e street. The young dad — who was the shooter’s intended target — refused to help police catch the shooter.

Daquan Breland, 32, and Daquan Wright, 24, were arrested at a hideout in Wilkes-Barre, Pa., shortly after the killing.

Breland, who fired off the shots, is serving a minimum of 25 years for Antiq’s murder at Upstate Correction­al Facility in Franklin County and will be eligible for parole in 2038, Department of Correction records show.

Wright was convicted of criminal possession of a weapon for his role in the slaying and is currently behind bars at Attica Correction­al Facility serving a maximum of 15 years.

Hennis is a member of Brooklyn’s Eight Deuce Trey — a set of the notorious Crips street gang — and boasts about his involvemen­t in the dangerous crew under his rap name Loccie Shmula, prosecutor­s said.

In a video interview posted to YouTube, Hennis said he “officially officially officially like came to the set, like, I would say, like, eighth grade, seventh. … I really was, really was down with the gang,” court documents allege.

He also has a rap sheet with more than two dozen arrests on charges that include aggravated harassment and assault. In June 2013, Antiq’s mother called 911 claiming Hennis beat her up and threatened to kill her, prosecutor­s said.

Just a month after his son’s death, Hennis was back on law enforcemen­t’s radar for a strong-arm subway robbery after he held up a teenager on a No. 3 train in Brooklyn. He was arrested and charged with robbery and assault.

Two months later, Antiq’s mother again reported to police that Hennis threatened to shoot her. She was hospitaliz­ed after Hennis allegedly spit on her, punched her in the face and choked her.

He is facing up to 51 months in federal prison for last year’s shooting.

 ?? ?? Anthony Hennis exasperate­d detectives in 2013 when he refused to cooperate after his son was killed by gunfire as Hennis pushed tot in a stroller.
Anthony Hennis exasperate­d detectives in 2013 when he refused to cooperate after his son was killed by gunfire as Hennis pushed tot in a stroller.

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