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Inmate’s tip leads to arrests of two suspects in Hadiya Pendleton slaying

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(MCT) — CHICAGO — The break came, at last, on Saturday.

As pressure mounted over nearly two weeks, Chicago police investigating the murder of 15-year-old Hadiya Pendleton had followed leads that hadn’t panned out.

Then on Saturday, tipped by a Cook County jail inmate, investigators picked up a recent parolee who revealed that two reputed Gangster Disciples had admitted shooting the honor student after mistaking her group for rival gang members, a law enforcement source told The Chicago Tribune in the first detailed account of how police cracked the high-profile case.

Using the threat of a return trip to prison as leverage, detectives convinced the parolee to give up the names of other gang members who could corroborate his account, the source said. By late Saturday night, Michael Ward and Kenneth Williams were arrested on the South Side on their way to celebrate a friend’s birthday at a strip club, according to police.

On Tuesday, Cook County prosecutors laid out their case against the two, providing a glimpse at the motivation and consequences of gang violence in 2013 when many shootings are the result of turf battles and animosities among splintered factions of the same street gang.

Ward, 18, and Williams, 20, were charged with first-degree murder, attempted murder and aggravated unlawful use of a weapon in the shooting that has become a national symbol of Chicago’s scourge of gun violence because of Hadiya’s promise and youth. Two of her classmates were also wounded.

The suspects, identified by authorities as members of the SUWU gang faction, stood silently with their hands behind their backs as prosecutors detailed the charges before a packed courtroom. Both were ordered held without bond. A sheriff’s department source said they were being kept apart from other inmates at Cook County Jail out of “concern for their safety.”

The strongest evidence highlighted in court was an alleged videotaped confession by Ward, whom police identified as the triggerman. But investigators acknowledged that the murder weapon has not been found, and prosecutors made no mention of any significant physical evidence tying either suspect to the shooting. Since Williams quickly “lawyered up” and gave no statement to police, the evidence cited against him by prosecutors appears slimmer. He also has no criminal background.

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