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Jury deliberating at trial of 2 men accused in Schuylkill River Trail slaying

Cody Reed, of Norristown, and Marquise Johnson, of Philadelphia, are accused of gunshot slaying of Daquan Tucker, of Reading

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NORRISTOWN — The fates of two men, one from Norristown and the other from Philadelphia, are in the hands of a Montgomery County jury on charges they participated in the gunshot slaying of a former Reading man on the Schuylkill River Trail in West Norriton.

Cody Kavon Reed, 24, of the 300 block of West Marshall Street, Norristown, and Marquise Alexander Johnson, 24, of the 500 block of East Johnson Street, Philadelphia, showed no emotion as the jury was handed the case and began deliberations shortly before noon on Thursday.

Reed and Johnson each face charges of first-, second-, and third-degree murder, robbery, weapons offenses and flight to avoid apprehension in connection with the alleged 9 p.m. March 2, 2023, gunshot slaying of Daquan Kennard Tucker, 25, a former Reading resident, who was staying with his girlfriend along Rogers Road in Lower Providence at the time of his death.

First-degree murder, an intentional killing, and second-degree murder, a killing committed during the course of another felony such as robbery, carry mandatory life prison terms. A conviction of third-degre murder, a killing committed with malice, carries a possible maximum sentence of 20 to 40 years in prison.

The jury of six men and six women were handed the case after hearing closing arguments from the lawyers and receiving legal instructions from presiding Judge William R. Carpenter.

Cody Kavon Reed, 24, of Norristown, is escorted by sheriff's deputies to a Montgomery County courtroom for his homicide trial on June 3, 2024. (Photo by Carl Hessler Jr. - MediaNews Group)
Cody Kavon Reed, 24, of Norristown, is escorted by sheriff’s deputies to a Montgomery County courtroom for his homicide trial on June 3, 2024. (Photo by Carl Hessler Jr. – MediaNews Group)

During the trial, Assistant District Attorney Kathleen Alane McLaughlin and co-prosecutor Caitlin Faith O’Malley alleged Reed and Johnson had “an agreement” to lure Tucker to the “desolate and secluded” recreational trail to kill him.

“Their actions show us their agreement. Their actions show us their intention when they lured him to this area of the trail. The last time we see (Tucker) alive he is with these two,” McLaughlin dramatically pointed at Reed and Johnson, seated at the defense table, during her closing statement to the jury on Thursday. “All trails lead to Cody and Marquise.”

Prosecutors pointed to cellphone data and video surveillance footage that indicated the three men were walking in the area of West Main and Chain streets in Norristown at 8:39 p.m. March 2 toward the trail where Tucker was ultimately killed.

“Daquan is executed with three gunshots to his head,” McLaughlin argued, adding evidence showed Reed and Johnson exited the trail without Tucker but with Tucker’s cellphone. “They left him for dead on the Schuylkill River Trail.”

Detectives testified cellphone location data tracked Tucker’s phone traveling from the area of the trail in West Norriton and back toward Norristown where Reed resided. Prosecutors argued the cellphone evidence was consistent with footage from various surveillance cameras in the Norristown area that depicted Reed and Johnson walking away from the trail on Schuylkill Avenue about 9:38 p.m. and then along West Airy Street at 10:06 p.m., without Tucker, but at the same place and time where cellphone location data placed Tucker’s cellphone.

McLaughlin and O’Malley argued it was no coincidence that Reed and Johnson were the last people seen with Tucker and that they were in possession of Tucker’s cellphone after he was killed.

Marquise Johnson is escorted by a deputy sheriff from a Montgomery County courtroom on June 5, 2024, during a break at his homicide trial. (Photo by Carl Hessler Jr. - MediaNews Group)
Marquise Johnson is escorted by a deputy sheriff from a Montgomery County courtroom on June 5, 2024, during a break at his homicide trial. (Photo by Carl Hessler Jr. – MediaNews Group)

Prosecutors did not have to present a motive for the alleged killing.

There were no eyewitnesses to the killing and no murder weapon was recovered. But prosecutors argued that while they don’t know which of the two men fired the fatal shots, circumstantial evidence pointed to Reed and Johnson as the killers.

Reed and Johnson are charged with homicide under accomplice liability theories. Prosecutors argued jurors can rely on circumstantial evidence alone to convict the men.

But defense lawyer Brendan Michael Campbell, who represents Reed, argued that while all three men were hanging out together at some point on March 2 there is no DNA, fingerprint, footprint or gun evidence to link Reed to Tucker’s death. Campbell argued that none of the video surveillance footage presented at trial depicted Reed or Johnson with a gun.

“There’s a lot of holes in this case. There’s a lack of evidence,” Campbell argued during his closing statement to jurors, asking them to be critical of and to scrutinize the prosecution’s evidence. “There’s no direct evidence. They are spoon feeding you their version of what they think happened.”

Defense lawyer John Francis McCaul, who represents Johnson, argued there is no physical or forensic evidence to link Johnson or Reed to the crime and he suggested prosecutors do not have evidence that any agreement existed between Johnson and Reed. McCaul suggested Tucker “ran in a dangerous circle” and someone other than Reed or Johnson killed Tucker.

“The absence of evidence, the lack of evidence, doesn’t help the prosecution. The absence of evidence, the lack of evidence, leads to reasonable doubt,” McCaul addressed jurors during his closing argument, suggesting the investigation was inadequate and that detectives rushed to judgment against Reed and Johnson.

Campbell and McCaul, who suggested that cellphone data analysis is not an exact science and could not be trusted, jointly argued that no one knows what happened to Tucker between 9 p.m. March 2 and 9 a.m. March 3 when his body was discovered along the trail.

“There’s so many different possibilities of what happened that night,” Campbell argued.

It is the second time that Reed and Johnson faced a jury in connection with the murder.

In February, after hearing four days of testimony and deliberating eight hours over two days, another jury told Judge Carpenter it was deadlocked. Carpenter declared a mistrial at that time and prosecutors vowed to retry Reed and Johnson.

The retrial began on Monday.

Marquise Johnson is escorted from a Montgomery County courtroom on Oct. 27, 2023 after informing a judge he hired a new lawyer to represent him on homicide charges. (Photo by Carl Hessler Jr. - MediaNews Group)
Marquise Johnson is escorted from a Montgomery County courtroom on Oct. 27, 2023 after informing a judge he hired a new lawyer to represent him on homicide charges. (Photo by Carl Hessler Jr. – MediaNews Group)

Reed and Johnson, prosecutors alleged, fled from Norristown within two hours of the slaying and remained on the lam until April 6, 2023, when they were apprehended in Atlantic City by members of the U.S. Marshals Service and local police at an Airbnb on North Rhode Island Avenue.

“Jersey is as far as they could go. But they made sure they got out of town,” McLaughlin said, argung their fleeing was consciousness of guilt.

The homicide investigation began about 9:03 a.m. March 3, 2023, when a citizen riding his bicycle along the Schuylkill River Trail on the border of Norristown and West Norriton called 911 to report seeing a body in a wooded area between the trail and the Schuylkill River, according to the criminal complaint filed by county Detective John Wittenberger and West Norriton Detective Mark Wassmer.

Arriving officers found Tucker, “lying in the wooded area down a steep embankment, approximately 100 feet from the trail,” with apparent gunshot wounds and detectives recovered two .40-caliber fired cartridge casings in close proximity to Tucker, detectives said.

Detectives testified an analysis of the casings determined they were fired from the same unknown firearm.

Authorities found no identification, no cellphone and no wallet with Tucker and they used a fingerprint scanner to identify Tucker.

An autopsy determined Tucker died of three gunshot wounds to the head and neck, and the manner of death was ruled to be homicide. Tucker did not exhibit signs of any defensive wounds.

Cody Reed, of Norristown, donned sunglasses as he was escorted to and from a Montgomery County courtroom on June 5, 2024, during breaks at his homicide trial. (Photo by Carl Hessler Jr. - MediaNews Group)
Cody Reed, of Norristown, donned sunglasses as he was escorted to and from a Montgomery County courtroom on June 5, 2024, during breaks at his homicide trial. (Photo by Carl Hessler Jr. – MediaNews Group)

Testimony revealed a female friend of Tucker’s phoned a brother of Tucker in the early morning hours of March 3 out of concern that Tucker never arrived at the Lower Providence residence they shared as planned by 11 p.m. March 2 and that he was missing. The woman, who was dating Tucker, subsequently told detectives she believed a man named “Cody” sent an Uber to their residence for Tucker earlier and Tucker left in the Uber and hadn’t been seen since then, according to testimony.

Witnesses said when they checked Tucker’s location on the “Find My iPhone” feature it indicated his location was on the Schuylkill River Trail near Norristown between 8:57 p.m. and 9 p.m. March 2 in the exact location where his body eventually was found. A check of Tucker’s cellphone location at 10:06 p.m. on March 2 indicated it was in the area of the 1000 block of West Airy Street, authorities said.

Detectives obtained video surveillance footage that showed Tucker arriving at Reed’s residence a little after 7 p.m. March 2. Surveillance footage at 8:39 p.m. showed Reed, Tucker and Johnson, all of whom knew each other, walking toward the Schuylkill River Trail, according to court papers.

“The three then walked to a secluded area of the Schuylkill River Trail in West Norriton Township where Tucker was shot numerous times and killed and his property removed from him,” Wittenberger and Wassmer alleged in the arrest affidavit.

Video surveillance captured Reed and Johnson walking along West Airy Street at 10:06 p.m., the same place and time that witnesses previously told detectives the “Find My iPhone” feature located Tucker’s phone. Investigators alleged Reed and Johnson were in possession of Tucker’s cellphone after he had been shot and killed.

At 10:21 p.m., video surveillance depicted Reed and Johnson returning to Reed’s apartment on West Marshall Street, according to testimony.

During the trial, rules of criminal procedure prevented the jury from learning about the prior criminal records of Reed and Johnson.

In court documents authorities alleged Reed has “an extensive and violent criminal history with numerous assault and robbery charges” dating back to 2016, including adjudications as a juvenile, with arrests in Hatfield, Franconia and Lower Salford townships.

Reed previously was convicted of robbery in Bucks County Court, in connection with a 2018 incident in Richland Township, according to court papers. In September 2021, Reed was arrested by Hatfield police on charges of persons not to possess firearms and related offenses and was free on bail awaiting court action on those charges, which are still pending, at the time of Tucker’s killing, according to court records.

Authorities alleged Johnson’s criminal history also dated back to 2016 and included arrests as a juvenile in Hatfield. In September 2018, Johnson was charged by Quakertown police with aggravated assault and a weapons charge to which he eventually pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 2 to 4 years in prison, according to a criminal complaint, and was released from prison in September 2022.