Shooting Defendant Rejects Plea Offer, Judge Finds Probable Cause

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A shooting defendant rejected a plea offer in a preliminary hearing on Sept 19, before DC Superior Court Judge Renee Raymond.

Donnell Wells, 36, is being charged with aggravated assault knowingly while armed and possession of a firearm during a crime of violence for his alleged involvement in a shooting on the 500 block of Newcomb Street SE,. The incident occurred on Aug. 1, 2024, with two of the victims suffering from gunshot wounds.

According to court documents, the defendant was smoking and being loud with some of his friends when a witness came to the door and asked them to be quiet. The allegedly started to yell at her. When the woman’s son asked the defendant to stop disrespecting his mother Wells allegedly reached for a gun, and the mother yelled “he has a gun”, while she and the son wrestled for the gun.

The mother said she also saw a third individual enter the apartment who was shot. When Wells broke free, the mother ran back into her apartment. The son suffered a gunshot wound to his left of the chest and required surgery. The third individual suffered a gunshot wound to the left side of his neck.

At the hearing, Brennan Burrell, Wells’s attorney, told Judge Raymond that the defense intended on rejecting the plea deal.

The deal required Wells to plead guilty to assault with a dangerous weapon, in exchange for dismissing the indictment on greater charges.

Burrell said the defense was ready to move forward with proceedings.

The prosecution called one of the lead detectives from the Metropolitan Police Department (MPD), who identified Wells as the defendant and affirmed everything in the search warra​nt was accurate.

Under cross-examination, when the defense questioned the consistency of the victims’ testimonies.

According to the detective, one victim said the defendant “didn’t aim it [the gun] good.”

The mother told the detective that she was unsure of who shot her son, but her son believes it was one of the defendants’ friends in the apartment.

Additionally, the detective said he was unaware of how the landlord saw the three victims with firearms before reaching the apartment. The third individual refused to cooperate with police.

Nonetheless, Judge Raymond ruled there was still probable cause based on the prosecution’s presenting strong physical evidence.

Parties are set to reconvene Oct. 11.