The FBI released four photos Tuesday in asking for the public’s help in finding Shanika S. Minor, wanted in the killing of a Milwaukee woman and her unborn child. Credit: FBI

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A 24-year-old Milwaukee woman charged in the fatal shooting of a pregnant woman and her unborn child was added to the Federal Bureau of Investigation's "Ten Most Wanted Fugitives" list, Milwaukee's FBI division announced Tuesday.

Shanika S. Minor — who uses the alias Ida Jackson — is accused of shooting her mother's nine-months-pregnant neighbor about one week after Minor confronted the woman with a complaint about loud music. She has no previous criminal record.

She is the seventh Wisconsin fugitive to appear on the FBI list since its inception in 1950, and the first from Milwaukee.

Minor first challenged the woman to a fight the night of March 5 with a semiautomatic gun in hand. She fired several shots into the air and left the scene at her mother's request.

Hours later, about 3 a.m. March 6, Minor entered the neighbor's home armed with a gun. Her mother again attempted to intervene, stepping between Minor and the pregnant neighbor, but was unable to de-escalate the situation before Minor reached over her mother's shoulder and fired a round at the woman's chest.

Both the woman, identified as Tamecca Perry, 23, and her unborn child died at the scene. Minor has not been seen since the incident.

In the wake of the "heinous" crime, Milwaukee Police Chief Edward Flynn said, "it's important that a national hue and cry be raised." Putting out a call for Minor's arrest is part of Milwaukee's ongoing efforts to control violence, he said.

Police believe Minor has contacts in Missouri, Mississippi, Texas, Tennessee, Ohio, Illinois and possibly Georgia. She has not traveled outside the U.S. or been in contact with anyone abroad.

Police are offering a $100,000 reward for information leading to her arrest.

Minor, a black female, is described as 5 feet 6 inches tall and 165 pounds with black hair and brown eyes. She has a tattoo of roses on her lower abdomen with petals outlined in black ink, some filled with red ink.

More than 90% of the 509 fugitives ever to appear on the "Ten Most Wanted" list have been apprehended or located. Though the list was populated with bank robbers and car thieves in the 1950s, it has since evolved to incorporate perpetrators of violent crime, cybercrime, international money laundering and drug trafficking.

Charged offenders are chosen if they're considered a danger to society or have committed a long list of serious crimes, and if police think national or international attention to the fugitive will help in the person's capture.