Basketball: A player was arrested for fatally beating his girlfriend.
A Dallas, Texas, man has been arrested on suspicion of fatally shooting a 21-year-old woman after she beat him in a basketball game, according to police and the victim’s family.
Cameron Hogg, 31, was arrested and charged with murder in the death of Asia Womack, 21, on October 3, according to the Dallas Police Department.
According to police, the shooting occurred around 7:40 p.m. in the 4100 block of Hamilton Avenue, and responding officers discovered Womack on the sidewalk with “multiple gunshot wounds.”
She was taken to the hospital and died there.
Womack’s aunt told NBC Dallas Fort-Worth that her niece was murdered because of a basketball game.
“We’re taking it kind of hard because it was senseless,” Juanita Smith said earlier this month to the station. “I just don’t understand why you kill somebody over a basketball game.”
According to the family’s pastor, John Delley of Faith Tabernacle Church of God in Christ, the shooting occurred at the end of a basketball game at a park when the shooter apparently couldn’t accept defeat.
“When it goes to the extreme of such that you leave the scene, go to the house and get a gun and you come back,” he said. “I believe in forgiveness, but justice needs to be served.”
A $5,000 reward for information was announced for tips leading to an arrest in Womack’s death. Last week, police announced a warrant was issued for Hogg’s arrest. It’s not clear why it took several days to ultimately take him into custody.
He was arraigned early Friday on charges of murder, fleeing police officer, and driving while intoxicated with his bond set to $1.75 million, court records show.
It’s not immediately clear if he has retained a lawyer yet.
A search of Dallas County’s felony and misdemeanor courts system found he had seven others cases ranging from aggravated robbery in 2009 to deadly conduct in 2021.
Asia’s mother, Andrea Womack, said her daughter was friends with Hogg and long trusted him.
“She took calls from him when he was in jail and would buy him whatever he needed,” she said to the Dallas Morning News. “She called him a brother.”
Womack’s obituary remembered her as a young woman who had a passion for basketball from an early age.
“Asia was designed like no other. Her gift was expressed through her love for basketball. She had a big heart filled with so much love, joy, and laughter. She had a smile that could brighten your day,” it said.
Leave a Reply