A Birmingham man arrested when he was just 16 in the shooting of three other teens is now charged with capital murder for a 2015 slaying.

Terrance Crawford, 23, has been indicted by a Jefferson County grand jury. The indictment was issued Friday, but made public today. Court records indicate Crawford was first arrested in December, but that arrest was never announced.

Crawford is charged in the November 2015 shooting death of 33-year-old Tyrone Staton. He was killed in the 200 block of Eighth Avenue West. Police said North Precinct officers were dispatched to the scene and found the victim sitting in the front seat of a vehicle, suffering from a gunshot wound to the neck. Birmingham Fire and Rescue Service responded and pronounced Staton dead.

Edwards said the victim was a passenger in the vehicle driven by another man. A third man was in the back seat and pulled out a gun and shot the victim. The driver stopped the car, jumped out and ran for help to a nearby fire station. The suspected shooter had fled by the time police arrived.

The driver was questioned at police headquarters and told police he didn't know the back seat passenger, and said it was the first time he had ever seen him.

Court records show Staton was arrested by the ABC Board in 2012 and accused of bringing 10 pounds of marijuana into Birmingham. He was released from jail after posting bond and was indicted two years later, in August of 2014. In April of 2015, he signed a plea agreement with the prosecutor's office to life without parole under Alabama's habitual offender law. His next court date was scheduled for Dec. 17.

Crawford was just 16 when police said was charged with three counts of attempted murder and one of shooting into an occupied vehicle in connection with a shooting that wounded three teenagers in Fairfield. The shooting happened at the old Wal-Mart parking lot on Aaron Aronov Drive.

The shootout resulted from an ongoing dispute between two rival groups of Birmingham teenagers, police said at the time. Crawford in 2009 was convicted on felony charges and sentenced to 20 years in prison, with four to serve.

The same grand jury also indicted two men who are charged in the death of a Fultondale man during a robbery at his home. Ronald Fassina died several days after the incident at his 573 Overlook Road home in Chapel Hills, and police charged Joshua Dixon and Kameron David with robbery, kidnapping and first-degree burglary. David was also shot the dispute, which began over money.