Pennsylvania

Man Ordered to Stand Trial in Allentown Slayings of Mother, Sister

Latricia Ezell, 52, and Ashley Campfield, 29, were both in the parking lot outside an apartment building on North 5th Street Sunday when a gunman opened fire. Zakiiy Altariq Carson is accused of gunning down his mother and sister.

What to Know

  • Zakiiy Altariq Carson is accused of gunning down his mother and sister during an argument.
  • The shooting outside an Allentown apartment complex left 52-year-old Latricia Ezell and 29-year-old Ashley Campfield dead.
  • The shooting remains under investigation as Carson faces criminal homicide charges.

A man reported that he stopped taking psychiatric medicine weeks before authorities say he shot and killed his mother and sister outside an apartment building as a frightened 3-year-old boy "was running back and forth" between the two victims, a detective testified.

Zakiiy Carson, 35, was ordered Friday by a Lehigh County judge to stand trial on two counts of criminal homicide in the Oct. 28 shooting deaths outside the Allentown complex.

Detective Erik Landis testified Friday that Carson reported having argued with his mother, 52-year-old Latricia Ezell. He said the argument intensified after his 29-year-old sister, Ashley Campfield, arrived to pick up her 3-year-old son. Carson's issue, the detective, said was the "perceived treatment" of his nephew.

Carson went outside to smoke a cigarette, but Landis testified that he pulled a gun after the women came out and shot his sister next to the rear door of the building, The (Allentown) Morning Call reported. The child fled toward his grandmother, and Carson then shot his mother, Landis said. The child then ran back to his mother, and Carson returned to his sister and shot her again, and she died partly inside and partly outside the building, Landis testified.

During this time, Campfield's frightened son "was running back and forth between the victims," Landis said.

Carson then called 911 and told dispatchers what he had done. He was interviewed by police hours after the shooting, said Landis, who called him "cooperative from the get-go."

Under cross-examination from Carson's public defender, Landis said Carson brought up his mental health history during the nearly two-hour-long police interview. He said he was being treated with an anti-psychotic medicine for schizoaffective disorder, but stopped taking it weeks earlier because of how it affected him, Landis testified. Officers recovered psychiatric medicine prescribed to Carson at the house, he said.

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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