REALITY TV
TV
MOVIES
MUSIC
CELEBRITY
About Us Contact Us Privacy Policy Terms of Use Accuracy & Fairness Corrections & Clarifications Ethics Code Your Ad Choices
© MEAWW All rights reserved
MEAWW.COM / NEWS / CRIME & JUSTICE

Who was Egypt Covington? Michigan men who tied up and fatally shot singer set to spend several years in prison

'They used a pillow, they used a pillow to muffle the sound of the gun. They shot my daughter in the back of the head,' Egypt Covington's father said
PUBLISHED OCT 6, 2023
Groom and Moore entered through the wrong door into Covington’s place (YouTube/Click On Detroit and Michigan State Police)
Groom and Moore entered through the wrong door into Covington’s place (YouTube/Click On Detroit and Michigan State Police)

DETROIT, MICHIGAN: Two Michigan men are going to spend several years behind bars after they admitted breaking into the wrong side of a duplex to steal marijuana, but instead barged in on a woman enjoying movie before tying her up in Christmas lights and fatally shooting her.

Shandon Ray Groom, 30, and Timothy Eugene Moore, 37, both from Toledo, Ohio, were sentenced on Thursday, October 5, in the slaying of Egypt Covington, 27, a singer and account manager, in a Wayne County duplex, southwest of Detroit in June 2017.

Shandon Ray Groom and Timothy Eugene Moore's prison sentence

Groom was sentenced to 17 to 26 years in state prison after pleading guilty to second-degree murder, prosecutors said.

Moore was sentenced to 20 to 55 years after he pleaded guilty to second-degree murder and felony firearms charges.



 

What did the family members of the victim say?

The victim’s father, Chuck Covington, said the two deserve death in court according to Detroit News. “They hogtied — hogtied — my daughter with Christmas lights,” he said, the paper reported.

“They used a pillow, they used a pillow to muffle the sound of the gun. They shot my daughter in the back of the head,” he added.

The victim’s sister Jessica Covington pleaded with the judge to give the men the maximum punishment.

“When we know that individuals are so diabolical and evil and subhuman, it does not make sense to me that there is a chance that they will walk amongst the rest of us free,” she said, Detroit’s Fox affiliate WJBK reported.

A third man was also sentenced for Egypt Covington's death

Shane Lamar Evans, 34, was sentenced to 15 to 25 years in May after pleading guilty earlier this year to second-degree murder.

He had agreed to testify against Moore and Groom. Authorities said Evans worked at Covington’s complex.

He knew her neighbor who kept marijuana at their home. As the individual was going out of town, Evans planned on stealing the drugs when the place was empty.

The criminal trio drove together, prosecutors said. Evans pointed out which door to the duplex to break into and he stayed behind.

Groom and Moore entered through the wrong door into Covington’s place. They tied her up in Christmas lights. Then Moore shot her in the head.

What did Evans tell to the victim's family?

“I hurt you all, and I’m so sorry for what happened,” Evans told Covington’s family in court during his sentencing, according to the Detroit News.

“I don’t know what to say. I pray for your forgiveness, but I understand if you don’t forgive me, but I’m truly sorry," he said.

Evans “deserves nothing less than the maximum sentence allowed for my daughter, for my family,” Chuck Covington said at the time.

Arbor Brewing, the company where Covington worked, created a beer, A Girl Named Egypt, a hazy golden ale brewed with pink guava and lemongrass, in honor of her “as a tribute to her love and passion for life.”

The company says proceeds from the sale of the beer will be donated to charities that support music scholarships, animal welfare, and victims of domestic abuse.

“Egypt possessed an energy that inspired every life she touched,” the website tribute read. “She loved music and was quick to show compassion to those less fortunate than her. We are proud to call her a friend. We brewed this beer not only to honor her memory, but also to raise awareness for issues that were important to her," it added.

RELATED TOPICS MICHIGAN NEWS
POPULAR ON MEAWW
MORE ON MEAWW