Best friends killed hours apart in separate shootings in Alabama, police say

Credit: DaytonDailyNews

Derrick Marks Jr.’s mother said he was hurting, mourning a best friend gunned down outside a central Alabama barbershop Tuesday.

"I know you forever with me until we meet again," Marks wrote on his Facebook page about three hours after Delquan McNeily, 21, was killed.

Marks, 25, of Birmingham, decided to meet some friends to play video games and take his mind off his friend's slaying. Minutes after leaving his home, Marks was also cut down by a bullet, AL.com reported.

He died a short time later at St. Vincent’s East Hospital.

"We never got a chance to see him,'' Catrina Carey said of her son's body. "I'm devastated. I haven't eaten. I haven't slept. I haven't put my eyes on him."

The spate of violence began around 1:40 p.m. Tuesday when gunfire broke out outside Corey's Barber Shop in Center Point, AL.com said. McNeily was found dead near the doorway of the business.

David Agee, deputy chief of the Jefferson County Sheriff's Office, said the preliminary investigation indicated a group of men were arguing outside the barber shop, which AL.com reported is located in a heavily-populated commercial area. Witnesses from nearby businesses reported hearing at least five or six gunshots and seeing a vehicle speed away.

“We don’t know what the argument was about, but weapons were drawn and a man was shot, and he is dead,” Agee said at the scene.

AL.com reported that investigators determined McNeily and another man were arguing when a third person came out of the barber shop and opened fire, striking the victim. He was pronounced dead at 1:50 p.m.

Marks was among the grief-stricken family and friends who gathered outside the barrier of police tape cordoning off the shop that afternoon, Carey told the news site.

"They were best friends,'' Carey said of McNeily and her son. "He used to be at my home all the time. They were very close. He was very sweet. He was the one in the bunch that never talked. He was on the timid side."

Carey said she saw her son when he came home from the crime scene in Center Point. Concerned about the violence and about how upset Marks was, she begged him to stay in that night.

"I said, 'Just don't go back out. I don't know what's going on. Please just stay in the house,'" Carey told AL.com.

Marks got a phone call, however, and was soon packing up his gaming console to take with him to the Hunter Ridge Apartments in nearby Irondale, where he and friends planned to play for cash. He walked out the door around 6 p.m. and within 15 minutes, he had been fatally wounded.

Carey told AL.com a bullet that struck Marks in the leg traveled internally to his heart, killing him. He was pronounced dead at the hospital at 7:13 p.m., less than six hours after his best friend's official time of death. The shootings took place about 6 miles apart.

Irondale police officials told the news site Marks was found sitting in a vehicle in the apartment complex’s parking lot, which was littered with about three dozen shell casings. Investigators do not believe he was in the vehicle when he was shot.

Carey said she believes her son may have been ambushed by someone who knew he was bringing cash to the apartment. She said she believes the two shootings in such a short time span are a coincidence.

"In my heart, I don't feel like one had anything to do with the other," she told AL.com.

Carey said she was still trying to comprehend both her son and his best friend being killed.

“There’s so much violence in the neighborhood. We trying to talk to the kids, and the teens, and the young men, but the violence has just taken over,” she said.

Carey said she will always remember the creative side of her son, who worked in refrigeration but dreamed of being a rapper. Marks had some success on the local rap scene under the stage name ABM Brazi.

She urged the person who shot her son to surrender to police.

"Whoever did it, especially if it was a friend, turn yourself in. You really hurt a lot of people," Carey said, according to the news site. "I forgive you and I hope God blesses you, but I want justice served."

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