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Love Triangle Shooting in Florida: ‘Mistress’ Allegedly Uses Gun Belonging to ‘Sugar Daddy,’ Say Police

South Daytona Police Department Vehicle | Lee Woods 2006

According to police in Florida, a mistress used her sugar daddy’s gun to shoot at his girlfriend’s car as she drove away with a kid inside.

In an affidavit, the South Daytona Police Department stated that Zehra Percy, 20, was strolling outside an apartment with a guy only named as Deonte when his girlfriend and his one-year-old daughter drove away at approximately 9 p.m. on Nov. 4. An unnamed individual shrieked, “She has a gun,” and fled back to her car as a woman left the automobile.

Percy, who was subsequently identified as the culprit, reportedly raced to a silver Acura and opened the trunk before firing several rounds in the direction Deonte’s girlfriend was driving.

Police suspect Percy is the boyfriend’s “mistress” and that the pistol in this case belongs to her “sugar daddy,” according to the affidavit. The gun was found during a traffic stop while Percy was inside.

According to security footage from the event, Percy allegedly fired the pistol twice in the direction of the victim’s girlfriend, and two bullet casings were discovered at the site. There were no injuries.

According to witnesses, the woman and Percy had a fight prior to the love triangle shooting.

According to FOX 13, Percy was charged with firing into a car and was freed from jail on $5,000 bail.

Jennifer Blagg Thought She’d Found the Perfect Husband, But She Vanished

Percy’s crime of passion was reminiscent of an old case revived recently by Killer Relationship. It was about Jennifer Blagg and her “perfect husband.”

Jennifer’s acquaintances described her as a “very sweet woman” who valued her faith. After moving to San Diego to study business at National University, she went to a party and met someone who seemed to value faith as much as she did: 25-year-old Michael Blagg, a helicopter pilot in the United States. The city is presently home to the Navy.

“Jennifer was always looking for a great family man, a great Christian man, for him to be the provider and have kids,” Jennifer’s friend Teresa Wiedenmann said.

The couple married in 1991. Michael soon left the Navy to become an engineer, and the couple moved to Simpsonville, South Carolina, where they had a daughter called Abby.

Michael departed for work early on November 13, 2001, like he normally did. He usually called Jennifer many times during the day to check in, but she didn’t answer the phone on this particular day.

“Man, where are you guys? I hope everything’s going OK. I love you guys,” he’s heard saying in one voicemail received by “Killer Relationship.”

Michael eventually went home early to assess the issue. That’s when he dialed 911, reporting that his wife and kid had vanished and that there was blood all over the main bedroom.

“My initial thought was we had a kidnapping… but what didn’t match the fact was we had this large amount of blood in the bedroom, which was unusual for a kidnapping,” Mesa County Sheriff’s Office Detective Wayne Weyler told filmmakers.

A large search for Jennifer, 34, and Abby, 6, was carried out, but they were not found. However, detectives eventually discovered something else: Jennifer’s journal. She said in it that she had a disagreement with Michael just before she went missing.

“She didn’t say what it was about; she spoke about it more biblically and religiously than factually,” Trish Mahre, a prosecutor with the Mesa County District Attorney’s Office, said.

Melson quickly contacted detectives with another strange piece of information: Jennifer had called her just before she went missing, asking if she and Abby could come visit her. She expressly emphasized that Michael would not be accompanying them, which was unusual for a family that had typically traveled together.

Investigators concentrated their efforts on Michael, hoping to persuade him to confess under questioning. When they arrived at the house, no one answered the door. When they heard the sound of rushing water, they decided to kick the door open. They discovered Michael in the bathtub; his wrists were severed. He was carrying a photo of Abby and Jennifer, a Bible, and a message denying he had murdered them.

A coworker immediately came in with an important tip: Michael had been putting trash out at work on the day Jennifer went missing, an unusual duty for a man who worked there as an engineer. Authorities found the dump where his job’s rubbish would end up, and after a thorough search, they recovered Jennifer’s remains in June 2002. She’d been gunned down.

Michael was arrested for his wife’s murder. He was not charged with Abby’s death since her corpse was never recovered.

Michael Blagg went on trial in March 2004. Prosecutors said he killed Jennifer out of a desire for power. He was found guilty and condemned to death.

The decision was reversed 11 years later owing to a problem with one of the original jurors: they lied about their domestic violence background in their juror questionnaire, CBS News revealed in 2014.

He went on trial in February 2018 and was found guilty once more. He will be imprisoned for the rest of his life.

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