Man who opened fire at club had past weapon charge dropped

This undated photo provided by the Kansas City Police Department shows Jahron Swift. Swift, who opened fire late Sunday, Jan. 19, 2020, outside a Kansas City nightclub, killing a woman and injuring over a dozen people before a guard killed him, had a past weapons charge dropped after lawmakers loosened the state's gun laws. (Kansas City Police Department via AP)
This undated photo provided by the Kansas City Police Department shows Jahron Swift. Swift, who opened fire late Sunday, Jan. 19, 2020, outside a Kansas City nightclub, killing a woman and injuring over a dozen people before a guard killed him, had a past weapons charge dropped after lawmakers loosened the state's gun laws. (Kansas City Police Department via AP)

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - A gunman who opened fire outside of a Kansas City nightclub, killing a woman and injuring at least 15 other people before a guard killed him, had a past weapons charge dropped after lawmakers loosened the state's gun laws.

Jahron Swift, 29, had been in trouble with the law before he opened fire late Sunday on people leaving or waiting to get into the 9ine Ultra Lounge in eastern Kansas City, when the city was celebrating the win that put the Kansas City Chiefs in the Super Bowl.

Swift was sentenced to probation for an August 2015 traffic stop in which he was caught with cocaine and a .45-caliber semi-automatic handgun, court documents say. Jackson County Prosecutor Jean Peters Baker said Tuesday that Swift was charged in August 2016 with a concealed weapon violation, which might have led to a probation violation that could have landed him a short stint behind bars or more probation. However, the following month, Missouri's Republican-led Legislature overrode Democratic Gov. Jay Nixon's veto to pass sweeping gun legislation that allowed most adults to carry concealed weapons without needing a permit.

"I have really thought about what is comparable," Baker told the Associated Press. "The only comparable I can think of is prohibition. All those whiskey charges that were pending in 1932, prosecutors couldn't carry them anymore."

Baker, who opposed the changes to the state's gun laws, said prosecutors had to "dismiss a slew of cases," including Swift's. Baker said Swift also faced a robbery charge in 2013 prosecutors couldn't get past the preliminary hearing stage because of problems getting victims to cooperate.

"We had the double whammy of non-cooperative victims and the law change later down the road," said Baker, who is the chairwoman of the Missouri Democratic Party. "What I used to love about these gun charges is you had police as your witnesses. We do struggle with witnesses. Then the law change took those charges away from us."

Police were trying to determine a motive for this weekend's attack, and it wasn't known if Swift knew any of the victims, including the 25-year-old Raeven Parks, a Kansas City woman who was killed. Authorities haven't said how many of the injured had been shot, but three of them were in critical condition.

A cousin of Parks, Tamela Smith, told television station KSHB that Parks had been texting family and was leaving the club when she was shot.

"She was walking out, and just walked into the midst of it," Smith said.

In a Facebook post, the club's owners described the shooting as a "shameless and senseless act of violence" and said they had "little in the way of answers."

The shooting led to quick calls by some to shutter the club permanently. Only about a week ago, there was a drive-by shooting in the parking long, and police had received complaints about the club in the past, said police Chief Richard Smith, who has no known relation to Tamela Smith.

Mayor Quinton Lucas said city officials would soon review whether the nightclub could be considered a nuisance, which might lead to its license being temporarily revoked, the Kansas City Star reported.

Just before Sunday's shooting, officers drove through the parking lot and saw nothing suspicious, the police chief said Monday. A disturbance occurred in the line to get into the club shortly before the shooting, but it wasn't clear if the suspect was involved in that confrontation, he said. The security guard, who is licensed to be a guard but is not an off-duty officer, heard the disturbance from inside the bar and went outside and confronted the shooter, Smith said. Police officers didn't fire any shots at the scene. The guard's name hasn't been released.

Police recovered multiple guns at the scene, all of which were believed to be the suspect's.

Kansas City has one of the highest homicide rates in the U.S., and the rate rose last year despite it dropping in many other major cities.