At 3:30 in the morning on August 23, 2020, Kansas City police were called to a hospital after two women with gunshot wounds arrived by private car. Jazmyn Henrion, a 23-year-old mother of three, was one of them. There, she passed away. The other made it out alive. After gathering witnesses and obtaining security footage, detectives charged KaShawn Nicola Roper with second-degree murder eighteen days later. Roper had already left by the time the allegations were brought.
What followed was nearly six years of movement — Kansas, Nebraska, Texas, Colorado, Georgia, South Dakota — a fugitive routing that covered enough geography to suggest either careful planning or restless luck, and probably some of both. The case was maintained by investigators.

The federal government increased the legal pressure but did not result in an arrest when it issued a fresh warrant in July 2021 for unauthorized flight to avoid prosecution. The Kansas City Metro Violent Crime Task Force of the FBI continued to operate. The years went by without a conclusion that felt just to the family of Jazmyn Henrion, who was raising three children at the time of her shooting.
Roper was added to the FBI’s list of Ten Most Wanted Fugitives in April 2026, almost six years after the incident. It wasn’t a hasty choice. The list has held 541 names since its creation in 1950, and Roper became only the 13th woman ever to appear on it — and the second from Kansas City. The announcement was made at a morning news conference, with FBI Acting Special Agent in Charge Jeff Berkebile standing alongside KCPD Chief Stacey Graves and Jackson County Prosecutor Melesa Johnson.
Information leading to an arrest and conviction might result in a reward of up to $1 million. According to Berkebile, the listing constituted an increase in pressure and a public declaration that the matter would not be resolved. Johnson discussed Henrion’s family and the consequences of a community refusing to tolerate violence.
The FBI’s own press release verified what transpired next, which has the appearance of a detail that is almost too tidy to be true. Tips started coming in to the bureau’s National Threat Operations Center within hours of the announcement on April 14. Someone had saw KaShawn Roper packing things into a car. At 10:21 a.m. on April 15, 2026, just twenty hours after the public announcement, a High Springs Police Department officer pulled over a vehicle on Main Street.
Inside was Roper. She was apprehended without any problems. By midday, she was labeled as an out-of-state fugitive from Missouri and taken into the Alachua County Jail on several charges, including second-degree murder. The entire process, from listing to capture, took less time than the average person’s weekly television viewing.
Twenty miles northwest of Gainesville, in the county of Alachua in north-central Florida, sits the little city of High Springs. This is hardly the type of location that frequently makes an appearance in national criminal news. Police Chief Antoine Sheppard issued a statement that was measured and professional, crediting the collaboration between local and federal agencies, and praising his officers’ vigilance during what he called a routine traffic stop. Routine in execution, perhaps.
Anything but routine in consequence. It’s hard not to sit with the specific geography of that moment — a Florida traffic stop on a small-city main street, ending a case that started in Kansas City almost six years earlier, three in the morning, a hospital, a mother of three who didn’t make it through the doors.
The charges against Roper remain allegations. Evidence must be presented to a jury, and the Jackson County Prosecutor’s office will direct the case from here. What the arrest does accomplish — immediately, concretely — is give Henrion’s family a court date to work toward. Prosecutor Johnson said at the announcement press conference that speaking up can keep communities safe, and “gives a grieving family hope that one day justice will be served.” We are now one step closer to that day. Whether the legal proceedings ahead deliver what that phrase actually promises is the question no one can answer yet.

