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Man admits to firing first pictures at Chiefs’ SB parade: police

In line with Kansas Metropolis cops, Lyndell Mays — one of the adult males charged with murder after final week’s capturing that killed one and injured 22 during the Kansas City Chiefs’ Super Bowl parade — admitted he fired the primary pictures.

Courtroom paperwork obtained by TMZ present that Mays admitted to the incident on Feb. 16, two days after a disagreement turned into a mass shooting. One detective documented Mays’ interview at an area hospital, the place he was being handled for gunshot wounds. In line with the paperwork, Mays initially informed police he didn’t shoot at anybody following the dispute. Mays was then informed that police had surveillance video from the incident and “he then changed his story.”

Mays, in response to the police, stated he was informed by the opposite group “I’m going to get you,” which he interpreted as “I’m going to kill you.” The report then states that Mays recalled firing “maybe two times,” however reportedly hesitated “because he knew there were kids there.” Mays allegedly didn’t goal anybody particularly when firing as a result of “they all could have had guns.”

“When asked why Lyndell Mays advanced on them to begin with, he replied, ‘Stupid, man,’” cops wrote within the paperwork obtained by TMZ. “‘Just pulled a gun out and started shooting. I shouldn’t have done that. Just being stupid.’”

Dominic Miller, the opposite man charged in relation to the capturing, initially informed police he ran after listening to gunshots. In line with the paperwork, when Miller was confronted about surveillance footage, he admitted to firing his handgun throughout the altercation.

In line with the paperwork, Miller informed them that after he heard gunshots, “he observed a black male with dreads armed with a black handgun shooting at him.”

“Miller stated he returned fire with his own firearm,” cops wrote. “Miller estimated he fired 4-5 shots and was uncertain if he struck the individual he was shooting at.”

Jackson County prosecutor Jean Peters Baker revealed Tuesday that Lisa Lopez-Galvan, the native radio host who died from gunshot wounds throughout the parade, was fatally shot by a bullet from Miller’s gun.

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