MINNEAPOLIS (AP) 鈥 Six people who knew each other were inside a vehicle when one, a man with an alleged gang connection, shot each of them in the head before fleeing, according to newly unsealed criminal charges in this week's mass shooting in Minneapolis.

Three victims died at the scene early Tuesday. Another succumbed to his wounds Thursday. One remains hospitalized after being shot in the face but was able to identify the shooter to police, according to the charges.

And investigators believe a fifth person was killed hours later in retaliation. A suspect in the first shooting Thursday and has been charged with murder.

Police say the victims were all Native Americans and the shooting was gang-related. The rash of violence has shaken one of the country鈥檚 largest urban .

What do we know about the victims?

The first shooting happened on Tuesday just before midnight in a vehicle parked in the diverse residential and commercial Phillips neighborhood in south Minneapolis. The Hennepin County Medical Examiner鈥檚 Office on Friday said the three who died at the scene were Evan Ramon Denny, 27 of St. Paul; Joseph Douglas Goodwin, 17, of Minneapolis; and Merelle Joan White, 20, of Red Lake. Two had been shot multiple times.

A 20-year-old woman was shot in the face and hospitalized in critical condition, the complaint said. She said the shooter was sitting in the back seat when he opened fire on all four other people in the vehicle before fleeing on foot.

A 28-year-old man who had been hospitalized in grave condition since the shootings died Thursday, shortly after Ortley was arrested, police said. His name was still being withheld Friday.

A second shooting the next day

About 13 hours later and a few blocks away, a man was killed near an apartment building that happens to house the Minneapolis office of the Red Lake Nation, one of the state's largest tribes. The medical examiner identified him Friday as Tiago Antonio Gilbert, 34, of Minneapolis. He died of multiple gunshot wounds.

The Minneapolis police chief said Thursday it was 鈥渆ntirely probable鈥 this second shooting was revenge for the first. But a police spokesman, Sgt. Garrett Parten, said investigators were still working to determine if there was a link.

Police have released other few details about that homicide.

How have Minnesota鈥檚 Native American communities reacted?

A makeshift memorial had sprung up by Friday at the site of the first shooting. Red, silver and black balloons were tied to a tree where a plush eagle toy was also attached. At the base were candles, fresh flowers and a bottle of tequila.

The state鈥檚 11 sovereign tribal nations Thursday, mourning the deaths and urging anyone with information to city law enforcement or their own tribal police.

鈥淎s native peoples, we have always known grief,鈥 the statement said. 鈥淏ut we have also always experienced the strength that comes afterward. We are here because our ancestors cared for one another. That is how you are even here 鈥 because someone before you chose love, protection, and community over despair.鈥

Police say the shootings were gang-related

The murder charges against James Duane Ortley, 34, of Minneapolis, allege he and members of his family are associated with a gang known as the Native Mob. It operates in the city鈥檚 south and other parts of Minnesota, the charges say.

The gang was the subject of a multiyear federal investigation over a decade ago that resulted in the convictions of 28 people. Its alleged leader at the time was to 43 years in prison.

The suspect is now charged with murder

The U.S. Marshals Service said its local fugitive task force and an FBI SWAT team arrested Ortley on Thursday afternoon. He was charged a day earlier with second-degree murder and being a felon in possession of a firearm.

Ortley has a felony assault conviction on his record from 2021, which the complaint said prohibits him from possessing guns or ammunition. Court records show he completed his probation in 2023. When police interviewed him in 2023 in a separate homicide investigation, the complaint said, he acknowledged that his street name was 鈥淏aby James.鈥

Ortley remained jailed Friday, and court records didn鈥檛 list an attorney who could comment on his behalf. His first court appearance is scheduled for Monday. The chief public defender for Hennepin County, Michael Berger, said his office probably won鈥檛 learn if it鈥檚 representing Ortley until Monday. Messages were left with several potential relatives of Ortley's.

What was the suspect's relationship to the victims?

According to the complaint, the victim who survived told police the shooter went by the street names 鈥淏aby J,鈥 鈥淟ittle J鈥 and 鈥淟ittle James,鈥 and was a friend of one of the victims.

Relatives of one victim told police that the victims were all together at a family friend's residence in Minneapolis but left around 9:30 p.m. with plans to pick up 鈥淏aby J,鈥 who was known to be a 鈥渃lose family friend鈥 of the victims. The family member identified 鈥淏aby J鈥 as the defendant.

Other law enforcement sources told investigators that Ortley was 鈥渁n associate鈥 of more than one victim, the complaint said.

The survivor told police on Wednesday morning that 鈥淟ittle James鈥 was the person who shot them, that they knew him, and that he and was the only shooter, the complaint said.

A surveillance video was consistent with the survivor's account, the complaint filed in Hennepin County District Court said. It shows one person matching Ortley's description exiting the vehicle and fleeing before police arrived.

The motive is still unknown

The complaint gave no details on what might have prompted the shootings.

鈥淭his is a bittersweet day,鈥 Police Chief Brian O鈥橦ara said in a statement Friday. 鈥淲hile this arrest represents meaningful progress toward justice, that progress is overshadowed by the heartbreaking loss of another life. Our thoughts remain with the victims鈥 families, their loved ones, and a community that continues to grieve.鈥

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Associated Press reporters Mark VanCleave in Minneapolis and John Hanna in Topeka, Kansas, contributed to this story.

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