Longtime USPS Employee, Aundre Cross, 44, shot dead while delivering mail on the northside of Milwaukee.

Absolut

Legal Bookie
Joined
Apr 30, 2012
Messages
15,641
Reputation
606
Daps
55,248
Reppin
Las Vegas
Fi1N-2NWIAAwEri.jpg
No worries if stuff like this doesn’t get posted the rates will nosedive right @Godless Liberal CEO
 

Ethnic Vagina Finder

The Great Paper Chaser
Joined
May 4, 2012
Messages
55,153
Reputation
2,856
Daps
156,256
Reppin
North Jersey but I miss Cali :sadcam:
I wouldn’t be surprised if it was a white man who did it. Pissed off about not being able to find a good job, because he was a C student and didn’t go to college. He sees a black man working a job he could never get and bitterness caused him to just kill him.
 

RennisDeynolds

I am untethered and my rage knows no bounds!
Joined
Feb 2, 2017
Messages
36,315
Reputation
5,254
Daps
106,341
Reppin
Paddys Pub
Soon they won't deliver mail to certain areas just like they stop delivering pizzas and food. And just like those situations regular people get fukked over bc a few a$$holes can't get right

RIP
 

AlbertPullhoez

The Takeover
Joined
Sep 7, 2012
Messages
31,678
Reputation
6,975
Daps
134,488
Reppin
Deuce Dime, TX

3 people arrested, charged in killing of Milwaukee mail carrier

Kevin McCaa, 36, and Charles Ducksworth Jr., 26, accused of shooting, killing Aundre Cross

MILWAUKEE —
Three people have been arrested and charged in connection with the killing of a Milwaukee mail carrier earlier this month.

Aundre Cross died while on the job in a shooting on Dec. 9 at 65th Street and Lancaster Avenue in Milwaukee.

The federal complaint alleges that Kevin McCaa, 36, and Charles Ducksworth Jr., 26, both of Milwaukee, killed or aided and abetted the killing of a postal employee

Online court records indicate McCaa has two open cases in Milwaukee from 2021 and 2022, with eight felony charges pending. He posted $15,000 cash bail in June.

According to online court records, McCaa had a "missed contact" violation the day before Cross' death.

Prosecutors also charged another Milwaukee resident, Shanelle McCoy, 34, with lying to investigators.

What the criminal complaint says:​

According to the federal complaint, investigators used surveillance video and cellphone records to track the three suspects.

The complaint says surveillance footage shows the suspects following Cross for 40 minutes from a silver Audi SUV while Cross delivered mail along his route.

According to the complaint, "Suspect A then crossed the street and approached the Victim from behind, at which point a gunshot can be heard on the footage. Suspect A then proceeded to run across the street..." in the direction of the Audi SUV.

The federal complaint suggests McCaa and Ducksworth Jr. were shipping drugs from California to addresses near their homes.

The complaint says Cross scanned a package on Dec. 2, one week before his murder, as "Delivery Attempted- No Access to Delivery Location."

That package never made it back to the postal office as per protocol.

The complaint reads, "USPS business records indicate the scan occurred in the vicinity of North 77th Street and West Carmen Avenue, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, which is approximately one and a half miles away from the delivery address. Following the Subject Offense, Postal Inspectors visited the Victim's assigned USPS post office and were unable to locate Subject Parcel #1."

An investigator wrote in the complaint, "Based on my training and experience, Subject Parcel #1 being scanned as 'Delivery Attempted- No Access to Delivery Location', combined with evidence it was not returned to its original USPS delivery unit, could indicate that a USPS employee retained the parcel or provided it to someone else outside of normal operations."

According to the complaint, investigators found the silver SUV, identified as an Audi Q5, on Dec. 12 in the area of Grantosa and Hampton Avenue in Milwaukee, near McCoy's registered address.

We're really hurt because Aundre is a good person, and he doesn't deserve this. He doesn't deserve this at all. He prays for everyone, always smiles, and he's a good person," said Cross' brother, Cornelius Mitchell, at the time.

The 44-year-old had spent 18 years with United States Postal Service.

"I'm happy to hear that there have been three arrests made in this case. And I would like to believe, and I think this had something to do with it, the fact that individuals asked for people to step up and provide information," Milwaukee Mayor Cavalier Johnson said.

The U.S. Postal Inspection Service had offered a $50,000 reward for information leading up to an arrest and conviction in this case. That office will not comment on if or how much will be offered to anyone.

However, a woman who provided video to police in this case sid she's been told to wait for a conviction.
 
Top