Thursday June 22, 2023
By Antonio Planas, Jon Schuppe and Madelyn Urabe
Radar indicated the black Cadillac Escalade driven by Derrick John Thompson was traveling 95 mph in a 55-mph zone, prosecutors said.
Mourners at the funeral Monday for five young women killed in a car crash in Minneapolis.Elizabeth Flores / Star Tribune via Getty Images
The son of a former Minnesota state representative was charged Thursday with multiple counts of vehicular homicide after speeding into and killing five young Muslim women who were preparing for a friend’s wedding, prosecutors announced.
Derrick John Thompson, 27, of Brooklyn Park, is charged with 10 counts of criminal vehicular homicide in the Friday night crash, according to a statement from Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty.
The younger Thompson is the son of former Minnesota state representative John Thompson.
Hennepin County Medical Examiner identified the victims as 19-year-old Siham Adan Odhowa, Sahra Liban Gesaade, 20, Sabiriin Mohamoud Ali, 17, Sagal Burhaan Hersi, 19, and Salma Mohamed Abdikadir, 20.
“Law enforcement responding to the scene of the crash also recovered a Glock 40 caliber semi-automatic handgun with an extended magazine, along with significant quantities of fentanyl from Thompson’s vehicle," Moriarty said. She has been in discussions with the U.S. Attorney’s Office and the FBI about possible federal charges related to the firearm and narcotics, the statement said.
Hennepin County jail records show Thompson was in custody Thursday. He was being held on probable cause of committing homicide, police said. It was unclear if he had retained an attorney.
“The deaths of these five young women is devastating for their loved ones and has shaken our community,” Moriarty said. “We value each of these young women’s lives and plan to seek a separate sentence for each life lost. I firmly believe in the potential for redemption and second chances, but Mr. Thompson has repeatedly engaged in extraordinarily dangerous criminal driving conduct related to apparent large-scale drug dealing,” she said. “He has caused immeasurable pain and suffering in multiple states and we will seek a significant sentence that appropriately reflects the devastation he has caused and ensures a lengthy period of incapacitation.”
Minneapolis police said in a statement that a state trooper witnessed a speeding driver shortly after 10 p.m. on Interstate 35.
“Before a traffic stop could be attempted, the vehicle immediately exited the highway. The vehicle then proceeded through a red light at the intersection of Lake st. and 2nd ave. and crashed into another vehicle occupied by four adult females and one juvenile female. An adult male exited the vehicle and fled from the scene,” police said.
The five young women were pronounced dead on scene, police said.
The radar on the Trooper’s squad vehicle indicated a black Cadillac Escalade was traveling 95 mph in a 55-mph zone, prosecutors said. The black Cadillac Escalade was also weaving in and out of traffic lanes in a reckless manner before it crashed into the victims’ Honda Civic that had the green light and was lawfully traveling westbound on East Lake Street through the intersection before the rented Escalade T-boned it, prosecutors said.
A record’s check in Minnesota for Thompson includes more than a dozen criminal cases stemming back to 2014, including traffic violations. Those cases include a 2017 felony charge for fleeing a police officer in a motor vehicle and a 2018 case of driving after a license revocation. He was also charged with driving after a license suspension in 2014, records show.
Thompson's Minnesota driver’s license was revoked in 2018 after he was convicted for fleeing police in a motor vehicle. His license was reinstated in March 2023.
Thompson also had a 2018 arrest in California, court records show, in which he was charged with hit-and-run resulting in permanent injury or death. He was sentenced in 2020 to eight years in prison with credit for more than 300 days served, according to court records. It was not immediately clear Thursday why he was apparently released early.
Khalid Omar, director of the Dar Al Farooq Islamic Center in Bloomington, where the victims who were killed worshipped, said thousands of people attended their funeral Monday.
He said the reason so many were touched by the loss of their young lives is because “these girls truly represented who the Muslim community is in our state and had so much potential.”
The victims, had Somali roots, and were preparing for a friend’s wedding slated for Saturday, the day after the crash. The friends had just been at a Somali mall where they bought last-minute wedding items and were headed home when their vehicle was plowed into, Omar said.