She said Jefferson offered to contribute $10 so they could all buy a bigger bag of crack cocaine. The woman said Woods called someone on her phone, who came to the gas station and Woods bought crack cocaine from him.

After getting out of the man’s car, the woman said, Woods refused to give Jefferson his $10 worth of crack, and an argument ensued. The woman said she told Woods, “girl give him his (expletive)(expletive), don’t get killed over a ten-dollar rock.”

The woman left the gas station in an SUV, and as she left she saw Woods and Jefferson continuing to argue on the bridge over Starkweather Creek on Darbo Drive, headed toward Clyde Gallagher Avenue. She said she saw Jefferson pushing Woods in the back, and saw Woods use her right hand to push back at Jefferson. The woman said she then lost sight of the two but didn’t see anyone else in the vicinity.

Police learned of Jefferson’s identity from a confidential informant who was shown a still image of the man at the Mobil station and identified him as “Lou.” Once police found he was possibly Jefferson, a detective showed the informant a jail photo of Jefferson, and the informant confirmed that was the same person.