A framed portrait of Marquisha "Kiki" Wiley cast a bright smile toward the man who ended her life two years ago when he sprayed bullets through a crowded St. Paul bar.
Terry Lorenzo Brown, the 35-year-old St. Paul man convicted of second-degree murder and other charges for his role in the October 2021 mass shooting at St. Paul's Truck Park bar, gripped a hand to his face as he listened to account after account of what he took from the people who crowded his Tuesday sentencing hearing in Ramsey County District Court.
"This nightmare has senselessly destroyed so many people's lives in such a devastating way," said Beth Wiley, Kiki's mother, before Brown received a nearly 37-year prison sentence.
Kevin Wiley, Kiki's father, raised high a portrait of his daughter and aimed it at her shooter as Beth spoke.
Brown's sentencing wraps up the prosecution of the two men whose conflict with each other led to one of St. Paul's worst-ever shootings on Oct. 10, 2021, inside a crowded bar of about 100 patrons, killing Wiley and injuring 14.
A jury in St. Paul convicted Brown of second-degree murder, four counts of attempted murder and one count of possession of a firearm by a convicted felon following a trial in June. Also that month, 31-year-old Devondre Trevon Phillips received a 29-year sentence for firing the first shots that touched off the brief but chaotic gun battle.
Phillips and Brown exchanged gunfire, striking each other and a dozen bystanders, as Phillips left the bar. Phillips was shot five times, suffering a broken femur and a severed artery in his leg.
Both men sought to apply blame on the other as they mounted legal defenses on claims that they were merely trying to protect themselves from being killed.