$50K bond for man charged with punching Marques Gaines, who fell unconscious in street and was fatally hit by cab

By ASHLEE REZIN
Chicago Sun-Times Wire

Marcus Dante Moore | Hennepin County Sheriff's Dept.

Marcus Dante Moore | Hennepin County Sheriff’s Dept.


Bond was set at $50,000 Friday for a man arrested in Minneapolis last week and charged in connection with the February 2016 death of bartender Marques Gaines, who was punched, then struck by a cab as he was lay unconscious in the street at a busy River North intersection.

Marcus Dante Moore, 32, was arrested about 9:40 a.m. Jan. 30 on a felony warrant out of Cook County charging assault with a deadly weapon in the death of the 32-year-old Gaines, according to Minneapolis police.

On Feb. 1, Moore appeared in court in Hennepin County and waived extradition, according to Chuck Laszewski, spokesman for the Hennepin County attorney’s office.

On Friday, Moore appeared in Cook County court, and was formally charged with aggravated battery in a public place, according to court records. Bond was set at $50,000 and his next court date was scheduled for Wednesday. Prosecutors did not say whether more charges would be filed.

His last known address was the Pacific Garden Mission, a homeless shelter in the South Loop.

Marques Gaines | photo provided

Marques Gaines | photo provided

Gaines was a bartender at a downtown motel who, after finishing a shift on Feb. 7, 2016, went with a few colleagues to have a drink at Mother Hubbard’s, according to a lawsuit filed by his family last year.

After leaving the bar, Gaines went into a 7-Eleven store shortly after 4 a.m. at State and Hubbard to buy a bag of chips. Upon exiting, he got into a confrontation with another man who’d just been kicked out of the store by a security guard, according to the suit.

The man who’d been booted from the store assaulted Gaines and left him lying unconscious in the street.

Neither the security guard nor a store clerk ever attempted to help Gaines “in any manner whatsoever and, instead, simply stood on the sidewalk as he lay unconscious and unprotected in the street,” the suit stated.

After lying on the street for two minutes, Gaines was run over by a cab; he was pinned underneath for three minutes, according to the suit.

Footage from several security cameras captured the incident.

Gaines was taken to Northwestern Memorial Hospital where he underwent emergency surgery, but died shortly thereafter, authorities said.

An autopsy found he died of multiple blunt force injuries due to an automobile striking a pedestrian lying on the street due to an assault, according to the Cook County medical examiner’s office. His death was ruled a homicide.

The wrongful death lawsuit, filed by Phyllis Nelson, Gaines’ aunt, named 7-Eleven and Mother Hubbard’s as defendants, among others. A financial settlement was reached last year between Nelson and the taxi driver, as well as defendants Globe Taxi Association, and Chicago Taxi, court records show.

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