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Rashadd Alexis was sound asleep in his bedroom the morning after two of his friends were killed and a 16-year-old girl was wounded in Landover, Alexis’ sister testified Monday in front of a Prince George’s County jury.

Shineda Alexis, 20, told the court her brother was sleeping Oct. 7, 2008, when she heard on the morning news that two of his friends had been killed the night before, but admitted she didn’t know what time her brother came home or where he had been that night.

“I told them that my brother didn’t kill anyone,” Shineda Alexis said she told police when they questioned her in March 2009.

Prosecutors say Rashadd Alexis, 23, killed Bobby Ennels and Anthony Cash III, both 22, in the early morning hours of Oct. 7, 2008, to silence Ennels.

Ennels had been scheduled to testify against Rashadd’s and Shineda’s brother, Jamaal Alexis, in Jamaal’s upcoming murder trial for killing Mitchellville music producer Raymond Brown, known as “Scottie Beats,” in October 2006.

Jamaal Alexis was found guilty of Brown’s murder and sentenced to 140 years in prison.

Rashadd Alexis also shot a girl, then 16, who happened to be in a car with Ennels and Cash but survived, prosecutors say. Rashadd Alexis was indicted In July 2009 on two charges of first-degree murder and one charge of attempted murder

The trial’s closing arguments were expected to take place as early as Wednesday, said Nancy Lineman, a spokeswoman for the county state’s attorney’s office.

Also in Prince George’s Circuit Court on Monday, Shineda Alexis and Rashadd Alexis’ aunt, two cousins and a friend testified about his appearance — long dreadlocks, mustache and goatee, earring — in October 2008.

The photograph witnesses affirmed as fairly accurately representing Rashadd Alexis does not match an eyewitness description of the short-haired man who shot Ennels and Cash, according to police reports both the prosecution and defense have referenced.

Before the prosecution rested Jan. 19, Wesley Adams, the homicide chief prosecutor for the county state’s attorney’s office, played wiretapped conversations allegedly between Jamaal and Rashadd Alexis and other family members for the jury.

The choppy, barely intelligible conversations, recorded in 2008 and 2009 at the county’s Department of Corrections in Upper Marlboro while Jamaal Alexis was jailed there, feature talk about witnesses in Jamaal Alexis’ case, a phone number for Ennels, the location of a gun, and a tow truck.

Jamaal Alexis used a tow truck to steal Brown’s car before shooting him.

Peter Fayne, Rashadd Alexis’ Riverdale-based defense attorney, argued county police Sgt. Sean Chaney — who monitored the audio of the conversations — should not be allowed to tell the jury who said what in the tapes because the recorded subjects did not identify themselves and Chaney did not watch the conversations.

Chaney asserted his ability to identify and distinguish between the voices.

“There’s no doubt in my mind after listening to hours and hour of calls ... I know Jamaal’s voice,” Chaney said.

abrownback@gazette.net