Arraignment Delayed for Smiley Martin, Suspect in Deadly Sacramento Gang Shooting

Arraignment Delayed for Smiley Martin, Suspect in Deadly Sacramento Gang Shooting
Sacramento police crime scene investigators place evidence markers on 10th Street at the scene of a mass shooting in Sacramento, Calif., on April 3, 2022. Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group/TNS
Tribune News Service
Updated:
By Mackenzie Mays From Los Angeles Times

SACRAMENTO, Calif.—A suspect in the April 6 deadly shooting in downtown Sacramento made his first appearance in court Friday after being hospitalized for injuries incurred in the melee.

During the one-minute hearing, the arraignment for Smiley Martin, 27, was delayed until Tuesday.

Martin is among at least five suspects of the shooting that left six dead and injured a dozen more. Police say the shootout was gang-related.

Handcuffed, Martin entered Sacramento County Superior Court with a bandage on his left arm, but the extent of his injuries was difficult to discern. Neither he nor his public defender made comments.

Martin faces charges of unlawful possession of a firearm, as he had previously been convicted of a felony, and possession of a machine gun. Prosecutors allege he also has a prior strike under California’s “three strikes” law for a previous robbery conviction.

There have been no murder charges filed in the complicated case, which includes multiple victims and suspects, a vast crime scene, and witnesses potentially reluctant to cooperate because they fear gang reprisals.

Both Martin and his brother, 26-year-old Dandrae Martin, have been named as suspects and arrested for gun crimes. Police are searching for another suspect, Mtula Payton, 27, who is wanted on multiple felony warrants. On April 12, police took the step of seeking the public’s help in tracking down Payton, who has an extensive criminal record.

Three men killed in the shooting were linked to gangs, prosecutors allege.

Last week, District Attorney Anne Marie Shubert requested that Smiley Martin be ineligible for bail release, alleging “clear and convincing evidence” that he “intended to engage in armed criminal action with an illegal firearm,” according to Sacramento County Superior Court documents.

According to court filings, Martin was spotted in video surveillance footage exchanging gunfire before fleeing the scene and discarding a Glock 19 handgun with an extended magazine. A preliminary ballistics analysis showed that he fired about 28 rounds, according to prosecutors.

In a video posted to social media that night, Martin posed with multiple firearms and pledged his allegiance to the Garden Blocc Crips gang, according to court documents.

The shooting, the worst in Sacramento’s history, occurred around 2 a.m. after a large fight broke out in the downtown entertainment district near the Capitol.

Killed in the shooting were Johntaya Alexander and Yamile Martinez-Andrade, both 21; DeVazia Turner, 29; Joshua Hoye-Lucchesi, 32; Melinda Davis, 57; and Sergio Harris, 38.

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