Crime, Law and Justice

Murder charges upgraded in Highway 169 shooting in Plymouth

Two vehicles on rainy highway.
Plymouth police released this photo in July that they believe depicts the moments leading up to a fatal shooting on U.S. Highway 169.
Plymouth Police Department

A Hennepin County grand jury has returned a first-degree murder indictment against a Chicago man accused of killing a fellow driver last summer on U.S. Highway 169.

Authorities allege Jamal Lindsey Smith pulled up next to 56-year-old Jay Boughton and fired a fatal shot through Boughton's driver's side window as the man drove home from a youth baseball game with his son.

The Hennepin County Attorney's Office initially charged the 33-year-old Smith with second-degree murder. A grand jury added a count of first-degree murder, which carries an automatic sentence of life in prison without the possibility of parole.

Citing witness statements and a Wisconsin police report, prosecutors say Smith brandished a firearm to five other passing vehicles in the hours before he allegedly killed Boughton.

The killing in the Minneapolis suburb happened around 10 p.m. July 6 on Highway 169, south of Rockford Road. Two vehicles were traveling southbound when a suspect in one vehicle shot at another vehicle, hitting Boughton. The suspect then fled the scene.

The charging document doesn’t detail a motive, saying only that the "shooting stemmed from a brief altercation" between the victim and another vehicle.

Erik Fadden, Plymouth’s police chief, described what happened as a“traffic altercation” but not a “back-and-forth road rage” incident, telling reporters last month that it was “really just a senseless act that happened in a brief moment when two vehicles were next to each other.”

Boughton died at North Memorial Health Hospital. A vehicle that matched the description in the shooting was found after law enforcement released traffic camera images.

Smith is being held in the Hennepin County jail on $3.5 million bond.