Two-timing beau fatally shot trans lover ‘to silence her’ after girlfriend learned of affair: prosecutors
A two-timing New Yorker gunned down his transgender lover “to silence her” from blabbing about their affair — after his girlfriend already found out about it, his murder trial was told.
Brooklyn-based Daqua Lameek Ritter, 26, is facing the first federal trial over a hate crime based on gender identity for allegedly shooting Pebbles LaDime Doe three times on Aug. 4, 2019, in the rural South Carolina town where he spent summers with relatives.
Rumors of the affair were swirling among the 8,000 people who lived in Allendale — and had already reached Ritter’s girlfriend, Delasia Green, the trial was told.
Ritter initially tried to lie, saying Doe was his cousin — but his girlfriend found messages on his phone from an unsaved number that spoke of “getting a room,” she testified, saying she had a “gut feeling” they were from Doe.
She confronted Ritter and started hurling homophobic slurs, making him “extremely upset,” prosecutors argued in court.
He then became “enraged” when he learned that Doe had told one of her friends about their relationship, claimed Ben Garner, an assistant US attorney for the district of South Carolina.
“He killed her to silence her,” Garner told the jury.
Ritter allegedly lured her into driving around the quiet neighborhood in Allendale County, with his distinctive left wrist tattoo caught on body camera footage when Doe was pulled over by police and given a $72 ticket on the day she was killed.
Two and a half hours later, Doe’s body was found slumped over in the driver’s side of the car — parked in a driveway off a secluded road close to where Ritter’s uncle lived.
Ritter had gone to that house the same night and was acting strangely before asking for a ride, his uncle’s ex-girlfriend, Kiera Mallory, testified, according to WISTV.
Other friends said he seemed “on edge” following Doe’s murder — with one even claiming he saw the suspect empty a book bag into a fire that night and asked him to dispose of a gun.
“Nobody gonna have to worry about [Doe] anymore,” Ritter said, according to another friend at the alleged burning.
As rumors of their affair spread, Ritter also told Doe to delete any text messages, the trial heard of messages retrieved by FBI analysts.
Doe’s cousin Yanna Albany said she’d also pursued Ritter, only cutting it off when the transgender woman told her she was seeing him.
Ritter turned red and threatened to beat Doe for “lying on him” when Albany broke up with him, the cousin said.
Green said Ritter was dirty, smelly and couldn’t stop pacing in the days after the murder — and when she asked him point-blank if he had killed Doe, “He dropped his head and gave me a little smirk.”
One of Ritter’s cousins, Jamie Prester, claimed the suspect confessed to the murder when in a car with her son, saying he did it because she refused to delete a photo from her phone.
Ritter is charged with a “hate crime for the murder of a transgender woman because of her gender identity,” using a firearm in connection with the hate crime and obstructing justice.
His attorneys have argued that his sexuality and relationship with Doe are not on trial, arguing the jury should only determine whether or not he killed her.
Lindsey Vann, one of the defense attorneys, argued Tuesday that no physical evidence points to Ritter as the perpetrator — including gunshot residue, despite the suspect took voluntarily.
Any lies that Ritter told investigators were the result of his deep-seated fear of being considered a suspect and adding more fuel to the local gossip about the relationship, Vann said.
Prosecutors don’t plan to seek the death penalty, but Ritter could receive multiple life sentences if convicted.
With Post wires.
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