Three More “Lows” Gang Members Hit With Federal RICO & Murder Charges in Minneapolis

Federal indictment announced in Minneapolis Lows gang RICO case here's what we know

Federal prosecutors have charged three more alleged members of the north Minneapolis “Lows” gang in a sweeping RICO conspiracy case tied to 10 murders, shootings, drug trafficking, and firearms crimes. This indictment is part of a larger federal crackdown on organized street gangs across Minnesota.


Who Was Charged

According to the U.S. Department of Justice (justice.gov, Aug. 26, 2025):

  • Marques Armstrong Jr., 30
  • Davant Moore, 23
  • Jahon Lynch, 20

All are Minneapolis residents. They face charges including racketeering conspiracy, murder in aid of racketeering, firearms offenses, and drug trafficking.


What the Indictment Alleges

Prosecutors say:

  • The Lows gang has operated in Minneapolis since at least 2004, carrying out murders, shootings, robberies, and drug sales.
  • The indictment links members to 10 murders, including a barbershop shooting with 26 rounds fired and multiple drive-by shootings.
  • Firearms trafficking and fentanyl distribution were also part of the gang’s alleged operations.
  • If convicted, the defendants face mandatory life sentences for the racketeering and murder charges.

Related Case: The “Highs” Gang

This case follows a June 2025 jury conviction of five members of the rival “Highs” gang on RICO, drug trafficking, and firearms charges. That trial marked one of the largest RICO gang convictions in Minnesota history. (justice.gov, June 10, 2025)

DOJ announces new charges in Minneapolis Lows gang RICO case

Why It Matters

  • RICO charges let prosecutors treat gang violence as organized enterprise, not just isolated crimes.
  • This approach signals a federal focus on dismantling Minneapolis gangs at the leadership level.
  • Community leaders warn that indictments alone won’t solve violence — follow-through with prevention and resources will be key.

Sources

Minneapolis gang trial tied to RICO case and federal indictments