Crime

Witness testifies he fired the shot that killed Durham Chinese restaurant owner

Hykeem Deshun Cox didn’t have a formal job in April 2018, he said, but he would spend a lot of time stalking businesses.

Why were you stalking businesses, the prosecutor asked.

“Rob them,” Cox, 24, said.

“Did you rob a lot of businesses,” asked Assistant U.S. Attorney Graham Green

“Yes, sir,” Cox said Friday as he testified at the trial of Maurice Owen Wiley Jr. in a federal courtroom in Winston-Salem

Cox, whom prosecutors have described as the “cooperator” in the case, and Wiley, 31, are linked in the attempted robbery and killing of Hong Zheng, a Durham Chinese restaurant owner, three years ago.

Zheng’s death, along with reports of the family’s multiple previous robberies and break-ins, shook the Triangle community and highlighted the risks that Asian business owners said they routinely face.

Zheng was fatally shot after Cox, Wiley and four others stalked Zheng and his wife Shirley Chan’s restaurant China Wok on South Roxboro Street and followed them home twice in the two days before they tried to rob them on a third night, according to prosecutors’ evidence during the first five days of testimony.

In opening statements, Wiley’s attorney said his client wasn’t involved in the attempted robbery.

Hong Zheng, 42, died April 15, 2018, in his Hope Valley Farms North driveway around 10:20 p.m. Zheng owned the China Wok restaurant on South Roxboro Road in Durham near the former Kroger and off Martin Luther King Jr. Parkway.
Hong Zheng, 42, died April 15, 2018, in his Hope Valley Farms North driveway around 10:20 p.m. Zheng owned the China Wok restaurant on South Roxboro Road in Durham near the former Kroger and off Martin Luther King Jr. Parkway. Courtesy of Hong Zheng's family.

Five days of evidence

Prosecutors have shown Wiley rented two SUVs and drove a group to the restaurant and house on three occasions, including April 15, 2018, the night of the shooting.

Wiley and Cox shot into Zheng’s minivan, the prosecution’s evidence has indicated. Other evidence has included:

Surveillance video outside the restaurant

The white Lincoln MKX that Wiley rented that was damaged in the shooting.

False police reports filed to address the damage to the Lincoln

In addition, one of the men was shot in the back during the attempted robbery.

In the month after the killing, Durham police charged Wiley, Cox, Darryl Bradford, 21, Semaj Maleek Bradley and Charles Winfor Daniels with first-degree murder and other charges in Durham County.

Bradley and Daniels were 18 and 19 when they were charged. Cox, Bradford and Daniels were on probation at the time of the killing.

A juvenile whose name wasn’t released to the public was also involved, police have said.

In August 2019, Wiley and the four others were indicted in federal court, and Durham prosecutors said they would dismiss the local charges as the case moved to the U.S. Middle District Court of North Carolina.

Wiley’s and Cox’s latest federal charges include conspiring and attempting to commit the robbery by threat or force and conspiring to possess a firearm while committing a violent crime. Thy could face up to 20 years on each of those charges. Wiley is also accused of possessing ammunition as a felon, punishable by up to 10 years.

Federal officials initially charged the men with using a firearm in a crime of violence that resulted in a death, which carries a sentence of death or up to life in prison. That charge was changed after the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled an attempted robbery doesn’t meet the legal standards for it.

Cox has pleaded guilty to conspiring and attempting to commit the robbery by threat or force in a plea deal in which the possessing ammunition while committing a violent crime charge was dismissed. The other defendants have also pleaded guilty in plea deals, but none, including Cox, has been sentenced.

On Friday Cox sat in the witness chair wearing white long underwear under orange prison scrubs. His hands and legs were handcuffed and shackled, and a U.S. marshal sat between him and the jury.

Wiley sat in the courtroom wearing a fleece vest over a button-down shirt and tie. A blue hospital-like mask kept falling below his nose.

Cox testified that he lied to police multiple times, saying Wiley organized the robbery and was the one who shot Zheng.

But Cox admitted during questioning that Wiley wasn’t the main planner and it was Cox’s bullet that killed the businessman.

“My bullet is the one that killed the man, but I am not the only one (responsible),” he said.

Hong Zheng was fatally shot while in his driveway of his home in Hope Valley North neighborhood on Sunday, April 15, 2018.
Hong Zheng was fatally shot while in his driveway of his home in Hope Valley North neighborhood on Sunday, April 15, 2018. Virginia Bridges vbridges@heraldsun.com

The attempted robbery

Cox said he and the others targeted the China Wok owners because they were Asian and the group believed they didn’t use banks.

“Because they have a lot of money in the house,” he said.

Wiley, Cox and others rode in cars rented by Wiley and watched the restaurant two nights before the killing. One of the nights, some got out the car near the family’s house to hide in the bushes and do the robbery then, but then decided to wait, Cox said.

Cox said the group of five men and the one juvenile met at Daniels’ house on Driver Street on the night of Zheng’s killing. Everyone was armed, Cox said, including Daniels whom Cox gave a gun.

They went by China Wok and parked for a minute before driving to Zheng’s house on Carlton Crossing Drive, he said.

They saw the headlights of the family’s silver minivan.

“Get on point,” Wiley told the group in the car, Cox said.

It was raining hard as Zheng’s wife Shirley Chan got out of the minivan with what they thought were bags of money, Cox said. Chan testified that it was food she was bringing home from the restaurant.

“We all just jumped out,” Cox said.

Bradley and Bradford ran toward Chan, he said, and told her to “give it up.” Wiley and Cox ran to Zheng in the minivan, Cox said.

After multiple robberies and break-ins, the family had a nightly routine. Chan’s then 17-year-old son would hand her a gun and a magazine when they returned home at night, and their daughter, then 14, would look out from a second-story window.

But after the son handed Chan the gun, she fell.

The gun jammed as some of the robbers reached the front door and started shooting, Chan and her children testified.

When Chan started shooting, Cox said, most of the others started shooting.

They ran back to the white Lincoln MKX. Cox was shot in the wrist, and Bradford was shot in the back. Other testimony indicated a bullet grazed Bradley’s face.

Semaj Bradley, who is charged in the fatal April 15, 2018 fatal attempted robbery of Hong Zheng in Durham, was photographed on May 29, 2018. The photograph shows two healed scratches on his face that investigators contend he received after Zheng’s wife returned fire on them during the attempted robbery.
Semaj Bradley, who is charged in the fatal April 15, 2018 fatal attempted robbery of Hong Zheng in Durham, was photographed on May 29, 2018. The photograph shows two healed scratches on his face that investigators contend he received after Zheng’s wife returned fire on them during the attempted robbery.

Made up drive-by shooting

On the ride home, the group came up with a plan to explain their wounds.

Daniels and Bradford would go back to Daniels’ house on Driver Street and shoot into the air, Cox said. Daniels would call 911 and say Bradford was shot, so he could get medical attention.

Daniels’ mom drove Cox, who had a bullet in his wrist, to his grandfather’s house.

As Cox arrived at the house around the corner, he said, he heard the staged shooting.

“I rolled up a blunt and was looking at news,” he said. He didn’t see anything about the shooting at Zheng’s home on the 11 p.m. news, Cox said, so he rolled another blunt and watched the 11:30 p.m. news, which reported that Zheng had died.

Cox called the juvenile, he said.

“Don’t nobody need to know,” Cox said he told him.

On May 9, 2018, a Durham County probation officer notified investigators that Hykeem Cox appeared to have a gunshot wound to his wrist.
On May 9, 2018, a Durham County probation officer notified investigators that Hykeem Cox appeared to have a gunshot wound to his wrist. Federal court documents

Bullet in the wrist

Cox started cooperating with police after his probation officer noticed the gunshot wound in his wrist about three weeks after the killing.

He was arrested about a week later after his arm was X-rayed.

In initial interviews, Cox told police varying stories that included him not having a gun and Wiley shooting Zheng, Cox admitted during his testimony.

Cox, whose testimony included a lot of yes and no answers, said he was testifying because he wanted justice for the family.

Wiley’s attorney, John Bryson, however, questioned that motive.

During Bryson’s cross-examination, Cox admitted to confessing to shooting into the minivan only after officials said the evidence didn’t match his previous stories.

Byrson also pointed out that Wiley was in a Crips gang — court documents indicate the Eight Trey Gangster Crips — and everyone else in the SUV was in a Bloods gang.

Bryson also pointed out that Cox had benefited from a previous plea deal he agreed to in Durham County court just 10 days before Zheng was killed.

On April 5, 2018, Cox pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit armed robbery related to a 2017 incident in which he and two others stole about $9,000 from Diamond Girls strip club on Angier Avenue, according to previous statements in Durham County court.

Cox, who agreed to testify against his co-defendants, was ultimately sentenced to two years of supervised probation, which he was on during the robbery, Bryson pointed out in court.

Bryson contended the Bloods kicked Cox out due to his cooperation in that case., but Cox said it was because he stopped “banging.”

Meanwhile, previous evidence put on by the prosecution indicates Cox was selling firearms on Instagram through April 19, 2018, which was three days after the shooting.

Ultimately, Cox said, he was testifying to get the family justice.

If Cox really wanted justice, Bryson asked him, shouldn’t Cox do the most time since he killed Zheng?

“Sir, we all did the crime,” Cox responded.

The trial resumes Monday morning.

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This story was originally published April 24, 2021 at 9:35 AM.

Virginia Bridges
The News & Observer
Virginia Bridges covers what is and isn’t working in North Carolina’s criminal justice system for The News & Observer’s and The Charlotte Observer’s investigation team. She has worked for newspapers for more than 20 years. The N.C. State Bar Association awarded her the Media & Law Award for Best Series in 2018, 2020 and 2025.
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