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Three Missouri men have been hit with federal gun charges in connection to the Kansas City Chiefs Super Bowl parade shooting.
Fedo Antonia Manning, 22, Ronnel Dewayne Williams, Jr., 21 and Chaelyn Hendrick Groves, 19, have been charged with illegal firearms trafficking and straw purchases of firearms.
The shooting killed Lisa Lopez-Galvan and wounded two dozen others on February 14 during the celebrations of the team's Super Bowl win.
Court documents said 12 people brandished firearms and at least six people fired weapons at the parade.
'At least two of the firearms recovered from the scene of the mass shooting at Union Station were illegally purchased or trafficked,' said U.S. Attorney Teresa Moore.
Three Missouri men have been charged with federal gun charges in connection to the Kansas City Chiefs Super Bowl parade shooting
Federal prosecutors said that one weapon recovered at the rally scene was an Anderson Manufacturing AM-15 .223-caliber pistol, found along a wall with a backpack next to two AR-15-style firearms and a backpack
Lisa Lopez-Galvan, a mother-of-two and popular radio DJ, was killed in the crossfire during the February 14 shooting
Manning is charged with one count each of conspiracy to traffic firearms and engaging in firearm sales without a license, and 10 counts of making a false statement on a federal form.
Williams and Groves are charged with making false statements in the acquisition of firearms, and lying to a federal agent.
Federal prosecutors said that one weapon recovered at the rally scene was an Anderson Manufacturing AM-15 .223-caliber pistol, found along a wall with a backpack next to two AR-15-style firearms and a backpack.
The firearm was in the 'fire' position with 26 rounds in a magazine capable of holding 30 rounds - meaning some rounds may have been fired from it.
The affidavit stated that Manning bought the AM-15 from a gun store in Lee's Summit, Missouri, a Kansas City suburb, on August 7, 2022. He is accused of illegally trafficking dozens of firearms, including many AM-15s.
Also recovered at the scene was a Stag Arms 300-caliber pistol that the complaint said was purchased by Williams during a gun show in November. Prosecutors said Williams bought the gun for Groves, who accompanied him to the show but was too young to legally purchase a gun for himself.
Prosecutors said Manning and Williams also bought firearm receivers, gun parts also known as frames that can be built into complete weapons by adding other, sometimes non-regulated components.
The complaint said Manning was the straw buyer of guns later sold to a confidential informant in a separate investigation.
One juvenile in a red hooded sweater is seen hastily pulling his backpack off him as if he is reaching for something within it
Eye witnesses told the outlet that the teen with the satchel, seen here, had been shot in the face during the melee
Court documents said 12 people brandished firearms and at least six people fired weapons at the parade
The federal charges come three weeks after state authorities charged two other men, Lyndell Mays and Dominic Miller, with second-degree murder and several weapons counts for the shootings. Authorities also detained two juveniles last month.
The shooting is said to have broken out from a domestic dispute between two groups.
Prosecutors said Miller, who was shot in the crossfire, is in the one who fired the fatal shot that killed Lopez-Galvan.
Friends of Miller also claim that he was a victim in the shooting, saying that he only fired back after Mays attacked their group.
Marques Harris claims that Mays ‘stared down’ his 15-year-old friend before pulling his gun and shot him through the jaw.
Mays is accused of firing the first shots in the exchange of gunfire. Although Mays did not fire the shots that killed Lopez-Galvan, Missouri law allows murder charges against anyone involved in a fatal felony.
Prosecutors allege Mays confessed to his part in the crime after being shown surveillance footage of him drawing his pistol and firing first.
'Stupid, man. Just pulled a gun out and started shooting. I shouldn't have done that. Just being stupid,' the indictment alleged he told police.
Mays and his friends got into an argument with four teenagers after they demanded to know why he was 'looking at' them.
Footage showed Mays aggressively approach them as his sister tried to hold him back. He then pulled out a pistol and fired at them.
Some of the other group drew guns and returned fire as Mays chased after an unarmed teenager while shooting at him. Mays was eventually shot and fell down.
He claimed to have only fired his gun twice, but how many times he actually shot was unclear as there were only seven bullets left in a Glock 9mm pistol found where he fell, which can hold 15 rounds.
The three men have been charged for illegal firearms trafficking and straw purchases of firearms. Pictured: A woman with a large cut on her face was seen being stretchered away from the scene
Two other men, Lyndell Mays (pictured) and Dominic Miller, with second-degree murder and several weapons counts for the shootings
The gun was earlier reported stolen from Kansas City.
His sister insisted to DailyMail.com that Mays was 'innocent' and 'protecting her'.
'For them to make my brother out to be a monster, it really hurts me inside because he was only trying to protect us,' she said.
'He doesn't deserve to be thrown in it like that. My brother is tall and broad, he's hefty. They were young kids and little guys, trying to prove a point.
'They had been looking at him, and they approached us, they walked closer they had been staring at him. We can see that they have guns in their pockets.
'We never walked up to them, they walked up to us.'
Footage taken on a fan's phone shows two of the juvenile suspects arguing in the background during a heated exchange with someone off camera.
The suspect in a red hooded sweater is seen hastily pulling his backpack off as if he is reaching for something within it.
While another teen lurks behind him, wearing a beige brown jacket and what appears to be a black bandana over his face, another is also seen wearing a black hoodie with a black satchel.
Footage shows the suspected shooter in the brown jacket being apprehended by bystanders at the parade following the shooting
Casy Filter, wife of Trey Filter, is seen here picking up the weapon after her husband and others tackled the suspected shooter (left)
Separate footage shows the suspect in the black hoodie leaving the scene with his hand caked in blood as he clutches his face.
Other footage also shows the teen in the brown jacket being apprehended by bystanders at the parade following the shooting.
The unknown man is seen in dramatic footage being shoved to the ground by heroic fans who chased him down.
Father-of-two Trey Filter was seen tackling the man in the brown jacket along with Omaha resident Paul Contreras.
The two juveniles charged have not been identified and Missouri law dictates that juvenile hearings are not open to the public. It's possible the suspects could be charged as adults if and when they are charged with a felony.