‘Extremely helpful’: Brother helps tip the scales for jurors to convict driver of Cadillac Escalade who sped from cops and slammed into car, killing 5

Derrick Thompson

Derrick Thompson (KARE/YouTube).

Jurors in the trial of a Minnesota driver who slammed into a car killing five young women while speeding from cops were unsure of the defendant’s guilt until prosecutors brought in a surprise witness: his brother.

Derrick Thompson faced five counts of third-degree murder and 10 counts of vehicular homicide in the deadly 2023 crash. Thompson had just rented a Cadillac Escalade in the Minneapolis area and immediately began speeding up to 95 mph as he weaved in and out of traffic. After exiting the highway, Derrick John Thompson whizzed past a red light and slammed into a Honda Civic, crushing the car and instantly killing the women.

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But Thompson’s defense lawyers argued it was their client’s brother Damarco Thompson who was driving the Escalade, as his car keys and hat were inside. Prosecutors reportedly issued a surprise subpoena late in the trial compelling the brother to testify. On the stand, he told jurors he was not in the Escalade with his brother, rather had driven him to the rental car facility so Derrick Thompson could pick up the vehicle and followed behind him in his Dodge Challenger until he started speeding away, according to a courtroom report from the Sahan Journal.

Damarco Thompson’s testimony was key to getting his brother convicted, juror Lucas Sundelius told local NBC affiliate KARE after the verdict.

“A lot of the questions [he answered] helped clear up the fact that they had multiple sets of keys for the Challenger,” Sundelius said. “Having him testify was extremely helpful.”

More from Law&Crime: ‘Continued to deny’: Alleged wrong-way Tesla driver who killed cop insisted to investigators he was not in crash despite strong evidence to the contrary

Another key aspect of the testimony was seeing the height difference between the brothers, according to Sundelius. The defendant was much taller than his brother and jurors noted the driver’s seat in the Escalade was pulled back.

“When we saw that we were like ‘OK we think it’s him rather than his brother,”” Sundelius told the TV station.

As a result, the jury convicted Derrick Thompson on all 15 counts in the deaths of Salma Mohamed Abdikadir, Sahra Liban Gesaade, Sagal Burhaan Hersi, Siham Adan Odhowa, and Sabiriin Mohamoud Ali. The victims were between 17 and 20 years old.

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