A Lincoln man pleaded no contest to second-degree murder Thursday for grabbing a gun from his center console and shooting a man to death in response to a fender bender.
The two — the shooter, Karsen Rezac, and the victim, Kupo Mleya — lived a block apart on Washington Street but didn’t know each other.
“To that charge, sir, how do you plead?†Lancaster County District Judge Lori Maret asked Rezac.
“I plead no contest,†he answered.
In exchange, Chief Deputy Lancaster County Attorney Chris Turner dropped a felony weapons charge as part of a plea agreement.
Rezac, 24, now will face a sentence of at least 20 years and up to life in prison at his sentencing in March.
In court, Turner said Lincoln police were called to South 20th and Washington streets at 12:20 a.m. Dec. 23, 2022, on reports of the sound of a crash, then several gunshots.
Officers found Mleya, still in the driver’s seat, with gunshot wounds to his head, his Jeep Patriot riddled with bullet holes and the driver’s window shattered.
The 38-year-old Lincoln man died at the scene.
Turner said witnesses reported seeing a light-colored SUV leaving the scene immediately afterward, and investigators quickly developed Rezac as a potential suspect.
Not only did Rezac live near where the shooting happened, but he also was the registered owner of a white GMC Yukon SUV, which police found parked nearby with damage to its passenger side and a window consistent with the debris at the scene and gunshots, the prosecutor said.
A search of the SUV turned up nine spent casings and a 9mm Glock handgun in the center console.
When investigators interviewed Rezac the next day, he told police he was backing out of his driveway when the Jeep “slammed†into him.
“The defendant stated he had a 9mm handgun in the center console and that he ‘freaked out,’†Turner said.
Rezac told police he fired toward the other driver before driving away, leaving his SUV a few blocks away, and walking back to his apartment. He said Rezac acknowledged officers still were on the scene, but said he was too scared to contact them.
Mleya, a native of Zimbabwe, emigrated to the U.S. to attend school and had worked at the Lincoln bike shop Cycle Works, at Frontier Harley-Davidson and as a groundskeeper at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, where he was a student in the late 2010s.