Four Held in Detroit Killing of Street Artist

Sept. 4, 2014
Police have arrested four people in the robbery and killing of a French street artist whose body was found in the ruins of an abandoned public housing project last year.

DETROIT (AP) — Detroit police have arrested four people in the robbery and killing of a French street artist whose body was found in the ruins of an abandoned public housing project last year, authorities said Wednesday.

Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy filed first-degree murder charges against three young males and expects to charge a 14-year-old boy in the killing of 23-year-old Bilal Berreni, her office announced. Worthy says Berreni was killed during a robbery but has not provided additional details.

Berreni's body was found July 4, 2013, with a gunshot wound in the face outside the Frederick Douglass Homes. No identification was on his body, and it was seven months before Michigan State Police identified him, using fingerprints.

"It sickens me that a young, talented artist who had traveled the world to pursue his passion was murdered here, thus reinforcing the stereotypes for many about our city of Detroit," Worthy said in a statement.

Dionte Travis, 17; Jasin Curtis, 18; and Drequone Rich, 20, were arraigned last week and ordered jailed pending a probable cause hearing Sept. 11 in Detroit District Court, Worthy said. It wasn't immediately known if they have lawyers.

Worthy said she expects to charge the 14-year-old Thursday.

Mourad Berreni told the Detroit Free Press in March that his son's art had a social message and that he was drawn to Detroit.

"For him, it represented the failure of capitalism and (he) believed that from that chaos something can be born," Mourad Berreni said from Paris.

Bilal Berreni painted large pieces in black and white on buildings, his father said.

Berreni grew up in Paris and began painting on walls in his neighborhood at age 15, according to French media reports. He later graduated from an applied arts school, then left to pursue his work around the world. He signed his work under the name the Zoo Project, gaining attention in 2011 through work in Tunisia in which he made life-size pictures of people killed in unrest in that North African nation.

Berreni was in Detroit in 2012 and returned in 2013. His father said he occasionally may have lived as a squatter in vacant structures.

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Follow David N. Goodman at http://twitter.com/davidngoodman

Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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