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US man arrested for ‘murdering’ Zimbabwe national hero’s son

A DAY after a Lincoln, United States, man was shot and killed, police arrested a 23-year-old on Christmas Eve who they allege is responsible.

Karsen Rezac was taken into custody less than two days after 38-year-old Zimbabwean Kupo Mleya was found shot near 20th and Washington streets just after midnight Friday, the Lincoln Police department said at the weekend in a news release.

Mleya is the son of the late Brigadier General Fakazi Mleya who died in 2007 and declared a national hero. Officers responding to a report of shots fired in the area found Mleya outside his wrecked Jeep Patriot with multiple gunshot wounds at about 12.30am, Police Chief Teresa Ewins said at a Friday news conference.

Police performed CPR on him until medics with Lincoln Fire and Rescue arrived and continued efforts. Mleya died at the scene. At Friday’s news conference, Ewins did not say whether investigators had identified any suspects and noted that witnesses reported seeing one person flee the scene, but the police chief did not describe the person or any vehicle of interest.

But police took Rezac into custody near 28th Street and Tierra Drive on Saturday morning, arresting him on suspicion of second-degree murder and use of a deadly weapon to commit a felony, the department announced.

In the news release, police offered no details on what led them to Rezac, who was taken to the Lancaster County Jail. He is set to make his initial court appearance Today. Mleya’s Jeep had been wrecked by the time police arrived on scene, but Ewins said investigators aren’t sure whether the crash came before or after the shooting.

The scene is only a block from his residence, near 21st and Washington streets. A native of Zimbabwe, Mleya emigrated to the US to attend school. He married in Chadron in 2007 before moving to Lincoln by the 2010s.

Mleya and his wife had a daughter in May 2011. The couple separated in 2014 and later divorced. Mleya had worked at the Lincoln bike shop Cycle Works and had also spent time as a groundskeeper at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, where he was a student in the late 2010s, according to friends and public records.

He had also been a student at Southeast Community College. He had a passion for education, friends say — but not one that trumped his joy for motorcycles. “It was funny, because he always told me, ‘Yeah, I spent all this time going to school.

But I really just want to ride motorcycles,” said Collin Post, who worked alongside Mleya at both Cycle Works and Frontier Harley-Davidson, and who described him as his best friend. Mleya loved his daughter and America, Post said, describing an instance at a motorcycle rally the two had attended where Mleya borrowed the US flag from the rally’s campsite and strapped it to his bike before parading it around, grinning ear-to-ear.

More than anything, Post said, he would remember Mleya’s ability to connect with strangers as if they were friends, which Post attributed to his infectious laugh and smile. “He had a way with people, man,” Post said. “He didn’t care who you were, what you were or what you valued or whatever. He just wanted to know everything about you. “He cared about people, just as genuine people.” —https:// www.newspressnow.com

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