Wynn emerged from the store and announced that there would be no fight because Nelson’s 2-year-old son was in the car.

The announcement didn’t deter the folks in a bronze Chevy Malibu. For more than half an hour, they chased Nelson’s Hyundai Tucson SUV.

Panicked, Nelson did everything she could to try to lose the Malibu, prosecutor Erin Hurley said. She wove through neighborhoods. She pulled into the parking lot of Marian High School. She essentially ran a red light, in the hopes that the Malibu would get stuck at it. It didn’t.

Along the way, her boyfriend’s mother called two other adult sons who lived just up the street from the Walmart. Wynn told her sons to meet them in the parking lot.

Nelson pulled into the parking lot in her Hyundai. The Malibu pulled in a few stalls away.

Outside the cars, Goynes-Wynn’s brother, Adren, squared off with Wheeler.

A fight ensued. Fists flew. At some point, Wheeler began kicking.

Adren Goynes-Wynn warned Wheeler not to kick him. The next time he attempted to, Adren grabbed Wheeler’s foot and shoved Wheeler onto his back.