A Minneapolis woman will spend the rest of her life in prison for her role in the slaying of a 31-year-old father gunned down in a St. Paul auto parts parking lot last summer.

Antionette Rie Johnson, also 31, was sentenced earlier this month in Ramsey County District Court to life in prison without the possibility of parole on one count of first-degree premeditated murder, according to court records.

While she didn’t pull the trigger of the gun that killed Renaldo Terez McDaniel June 12, 2016 in the O’Reilly’s Auto Parts parking lot near University Avenue, Johnson helped concoct and carry out the plan that led to his death, according to the criminal complaints filed in the case.

She drove to the parking lot that evening and let Daryl Negel Curtis, 36, out of the car armed with a gun. It was Negel who “noiselessly” walked up behind McDaniel and fired several bullets at him while McDaniel was hunched over under the hood of his car, the complaints said.

Negel then took off running and was eventually picked back up by Johnson.

McDaniel, who was a father to seven children, died after being shot in the head, shoulder/neck area and abdomen.

Investigators later learned that one of several men involved in an ongoing dispute with McDaniel was Jumoke Cryer, who is Johnson’s boyfriend and Curtis’ cousin, complaints said.

Cryer was an inmate at the Ramsey County workhouse on the night of the shooting.

Johnson called her boyfriend afterward and was overheard telling him on the recorded phone call, “He’s outta here,” and “I thought that might put a smile on your face. Thought you might sleep a little easier tonight,” the complaints said.

Surveillance video and information provided to police by Curtis’ fiancee, Tameka Rae Smithson, helped investigators eventually implicate Curtis and Johnson.

Smithson had also been in the car with Curtis and Johnson on the evening of McDaniel’s murder.

Curtis was convicted of first-degree murder in the case last year and also sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole. Johnson was convicted and sentenced on the same charge earlier this month.

Smithson was sentenced to six years in prison on one count of aiding an offender.

She had initially faced a charge of second-degree murder in addition, but that count was dismissed as part of her plea deal.