Update, 3:33 p.m. August 1

Bossier Police on Tuesday identified the 5-year-old child killed in a weekend shooting that police said involved a woman and her boyfriend and ex-boyfriend.

The dead child was Reese Williams Jr. Police previously said the child was killed by a stray bullet in the encounter around 1:15 a.m. Sunday at the Southern Living Mobile Home Park at 5303 E. Texas St.

Police also identified the boy's mother – Nicorya T. Chisley – and said that his father was Reese Williams.

The elder Williams was injured in the shooting, suffering gunshots to his upper torso and buttocks. He remained at University Health hospital Tuesday, where a spokesman said his condition had been downgraded from serious to critical.

The shooting resulted from a domestic dispute involving Chisley; her former boyfriend, Williams; and her current boyfriend, Keuntrel Rayshun Knight, police said.

Williams drove up to the home in the mobile home park with three kids in the back seat and left the car to knock on the home's door, police said. An argument ensued – and then gunfire.

Knight, 20, was arrested at the scene and charged with second-degree murder and attempted second-degree murder. He was being held at the Bossier Maximum-Security Prison in Plain Dealing.

Two other children also were present during the shooting, according to a witness.

Original story:

Catouya Jones-Feaster had just returned from visiting her aunt in Haughton around 1:15 a.m. Sunday when she stepped back outside her mobile home to smoke a cigarette.

That’s when she heard the screaming from outside another home.

Jones-Feaster didn’t hear the shots. But the screaming? Yes.

“She kept saying ‘He’s been shot. He’s been shot,’” Jones-Feaster said.

And there had been shots – enough of them to kill a 5-year-old boy and wound a 29-year-old man at the Southern Living Mobile Home Park at 5303 E. Texas St.

Bossier City Police Sgt. Joel Frentress said the shooting resulted from a domestic dispute involving a woman, her boyfriend and her ex-boyfriend.

He said detectives believe that a stray bullet struck the child.

Police had so far declined to identify the woman or the dead child, saying as late as late Monday afternoon that next of kin had not been informed.

The wounded man was Reese Williams, 29. Police said he was shot in the upper torso and buttocks. He remained in serious condition at University Health hospital, a hospital spokesman said.

Williams drove up to the home in the mobile home park with three kids in the back seat and left the car to knock on the home's door, Frentress said. An argument ensued – and then gunfire, he said.

Authorities arrested the second man in the alleged love triangle, Keuntrel Rayshun Knight, 20, at the scene on charges of second-degree murder and attempted second-degree murder. He was being held at Bossier Maximum-Security Prison in Plain Dealing. No bail amount had been set.

Knight was one of several people to have called 911, Frentress said.

The Southern Living Mobile Home Park is near the Villaggio Apartments and Serios Feed and Seed. A bumpy lane, Airview Motel Road, runs through the park, dotted on each side by whiteish or brownish paneled houses with an occasional gray home thrown in the mix.

Jones-Feaster lives across the lane and a few lots down from the home where the shooting occurred.

After the commotion from the shooting, she and a few other neighbors started to walk toward the screams even though she didn’t know the people who lived there.

“When we got down there, they had (Williams) on the ground trying to get him to calm down and let someone to cover his wounds,” she said.

For a moment, Jones-Feaster thought the woman screaming might have been shot too. Her white pants were covered in blood.

“She was screaming and hollering,” Jones-Feaster said. “She was covered.”

One of the kids in Williams’ car, a little girl without shoes, stood next to Jones-Feaster as they waited for the police to arrive.

“She was saying ‘my brother, my brother, my daddy,’” Jones-Feaster said.

The front doors of the car were open, and the passenger window behind the driver's seat had been shot out, she said.

Jones-Feaster didn’t know about the 5-year-old initially.

Officers weren’t aware of the 5-year-old either until the wounded Williams told them, Jones-Feaster said.

“He kept saying ‘My son, my son, my baby,’ and the mother was like ‘My baby, give me my baby, give me my baby,’” she said.

The officer looked in the car and broke down emotionally. The officer then called for more ambulances, Jones-Feaster said.

“He said ‘Not the baby. Not the baby,’” she said.

Work then started to save the child’s life. After about 30 minutes, the child was removed from the car and placed on a stretcher, Jones-Feaster said.

She said she a woman ran after the stretcher as paramedics pumped on the child’s chest.

“After I’d seen that baby’s body," she said, "I was done. I had to leave after that.”