Charged with felony murder are (clockwise from top) Ian LeFlore, Lakisha Love-Schoos, Oshay Randolph and Diondray Willis. Love-Schoos was married to the victim, Michael Schoos. Credit: Milwaukee County Sheriff's Office

SHARE Michael R. Schoos Submitted photo Shaquille M. Walker Milwaukee County Sheriff's Offic

By of the

A 23-year-old woman is facing felony murder charges after prosecutors say she set up a robbery targeting her husband, who was killed in the resulting home invasion.

Police say Lakisha L. Love-Schoos confessed to her role in planning the robbery of 54-year-old Michael Schoos, according to a criminal complaint released Monday.

Ian Westly LeFlore, 28; Oshay Shayfer Randolph, 23; and Diondray L. Willis, 24 also face felony murder charges. A fifth suspect, Shaquille M. Walker, 22, was charged last month in the killing.

Schoos was shot and killed about 6:15 a.m. Oct. 20 at his home in the 7100 block of W. Appleton Ave.

According to the criminal complaint:

Love-Schoos told police she met LeFlore at a car wash, where the two had sex and devised a plan to rob Schoos in which she would leave the door unlocked, according to the complaint.

Love-Schoos told detectives "she was tired of arguing and fighting" with Schoos.

LeFlore told police he had known Love-Schoos for about four years and had just been kicked out of his apartment by his girlfriend when he met up with her. She said Schoos would not be home in the early morning hours, LeFlore recalled.

The next day — Oct. 20 — LeFlore said he was in the area of N. 44th and W. Hadley streets and ran into Willis, Randolph, Walker and a fourth unknown man.

The five men got into Willis' car. LeFlore claimed that Willis suggested robbing what he believed to be a drug house on the city's north side.

When they got to the house in the 4900 block of W. Fairmount Ave., Willis, Randolph and Walker exited and fired several shots before running back to the car.

LeFlore said since that home invasion was unsuccessful, he suggested they rob the Schoos' residence because he thought no one would be home.

The group went to the house, pulled Love-Schoos into the breezeway at gunpoint and ransacked the house. LeFlore said he saw Randolph shoot Schoos in the back.

Investigators also linked the suspects to the killing through ballistic evidence. A detective located a .40-caliber casing in the bedroom where Schoos had been killed.

A Milwaukee police technician determined there was a possible correlation between that casing and those casings recovered outside the home on Fairmount Ave., which indicating they may have been fired from the same gun. Those casings are being tested at the State Crime Laboratory.

The technician found another possible correlation to a casing picked up at the scene of a shooting on Oct. 15. Randolph is charged in that case.

Randolph and Willis also are charged with first-degree recklessly endangering safety in connection with the W. Fairmount Ave. shooting.