Police arrest 1, seek another in triple slaying at grocery

February 10, 2012|By Mike Newall, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
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  • Ibrahim Muhammed, described as a 31-year-old career criminal, allegedly shot the owner of Lorena's Grocery, his wife, and her sister during a robbery Sept. 6, police said Friday.
  • Ibrahim Muhammed, described as a 31-year-old career criminal, allegedly shot the owner of Lorena's Grocery, his wife, and her sister during a robbery Sept. 6, police said Friday.
  • Nalik Shariff Scott is wanted by Philadelphia police. (Photo: Philadelphia Police Department)

Police arrested the alleged gunman Friday in a triple slaying at a West Philadelphia grocery store and issued a murder warrant for a second man wanted in the September killings.

Ibrahim Muhammed, described as a 31-year-old career criminal, allegedly shot the owner of Lorena's Grocery, his wife, and her sister during a robbery Sept. 6, police said Friday.

Muhammed, of Southwest Philadelphia, who had 18 previous arrests, had been taken into custody Thursday afternoon on an unrelated drug charge.

He has been charged with three counts of murder in the grocery killings, Homicide Capt. James Clark said at a news conference Friday.

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Police were still hunting for the second suspect Friday night. He has been identified as Nalik Shariff Scott, 30, of the 1300 block of South 24th Street in South Philadelphia.

It was about 8 p.m., just minutes before closing time, when two gunmen burst into the family-owned store at 50th and Parrish Streets, police said.

Porfirio Nunez, the owner, who had turned 50 that day, was shot first in one of the aisles, Clark said. Scott fired the first bullet into him, Clark said.

Muhammed executed Carmen Nunez, 44, and her sister Lina Sanchez, 48, as they tried to crawl for cover, police said, then fired the fatal bullet into Nunez as he stepped over the dying man.

The gunmen did not shoot Nunez's two teenage daughters, who had ducked behind the counter. The killers ran from the store to a car around the corner. They got no money.

"We had a family brutally executed for nothing," Clark said. "We are very, very happy to have made this arrest."

Clark described the arrest as a collaborative effort of police units.

In January, Clark organized a task force of detectives to take a fresh look at the investigation, then four months old.

Last week, investigators got their strongest break when they linked the slayings to an August stickup of a Southwest Philadelphia corner store and the shooting of a North Philadelphia store clerk earlier in the summer.

Surveillance footage of the Southwest robbery, at the Jaquez Grocery at 62d and Reedland Streets, provided investigators with clearer images of the assailants' faces.

Thursday, more than 100 hundred narcotics officers conducted drug sweeps through Southwest and West Philadelphia, aiming for intelligence on recent shootings and homicides, including the grocery-store killings, said Deputy Commissioner William Blackburn.

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