Case Classification: Homicide / Felony Manslaughter with a Firearm
Jurisdiction: Marion County, Florida, USA
Incident Date: June 2, 2023
Status: Conviction upheld; appeal filed January 2025


The Victim

Ajike “AJ” Shantrell Owens was a 35-year-old Black mother of four children: Isaac, Afrika, Titus, and Israel. She worked as a manager at a McDonald’s on Highway 326 in Ocala, Florida. By all accounts, she was a devoted parent who spent her time outside work throwing a ball around with her kids and being an active presence in her tight-knit apartment community. On the evening of June 2, 2023, after her neighbor allegedly threw roller skates at her nine-year-old son and swung an umbrella at her twelve-year-old, Owens walked across a shared grassy area to knock on the neighbor’s door. She was not armed. She was holding an iPad.

She was shot once, through a locked metal door, and died that night.


The Perpetrator

Susan Louise Lorincz, a white woman, was 59 years old at the time of the shooting and had lived in the same apartment complex for approximately three years prior to the incident. She had no prior criminal record. Court proceedings and witness accounts established that Lorincz had a history of directing racial slurs at Owens’ children and had made repeated complaints, to the sheriff’s office, animal control, and property management, about Owens’ family over a period of more than two years.

Lorincz owned a .380-caliber handgun, which she had purchased approximately one year before the shooting. She claimed to have bought it for protection. On the night of June 2, she called 911 before firing, telling the dispatcher that people were threatening her, establishing a narrative of fear for the record prior to any shot being fired.


Chronology of Key Events

DateEvent
2020–2023Lorincz makes repeated complaints to Marion County Sheriff’s Office, animal control, and property management about Owens’ children and dog
2022 (approx.)Lorincz purchases a .380-caliber pistol
June 2, 2023Lorincz throws roller skates at Owens’ nine-year-old son; swings umbrella at twelve-year-old
June 2, 2023 (evening)Owens walks to Lorincz’s door, unarmed, holding an iPad
June 2, 2023 (evening)Lorincz calls 911 before shooting, claiming she is being threatened
June 2, 2023 (evening)Lorincz fires one shot through the locked, closed front door; Owens is struck in the chest
June 6, 2023Lorincz is arrested and charged with first-degree manslaughter, culpable negligence, battery, and two counts of assault
July 10, 2023Lorincz pleads not guilty
July 2023Owens’ family urges DOJ to consider hate crime charges
August 16, 2024After a week-long trial, an all-white, six-person jury convicts Lorincz of Manslaughter by Use of a Firearm; jury deliberates approximately 2.5 hours
November 25, 2024Judge Robert Hodges sentences Lorincz to 25 years in prison
January 2025Lorincz files an appeal to overturn her conviction
October 2025Netflix documentary The Perfect Neighbor, directed by Geeta Gandbhir, premieres; premiered at Sundance Film Festival 2025
November 2025Lorincz threatens to countersue Owens’ family for slander, libel, and defamation

The Physical Evidence

The door through which Lorincz fired was locked and intact at the time of the shooting, no dents, no damage around the lock or handle. This directly contradicted Lorincz’s trial testimony that Owens was banging so hard she believed the door would break down. Prosecutors established that there was no evidence Owens attempted to force entry. A videotaped interview conducted by investigators after the shooting showed Lorincz stating she fired in self-defense, claiming she feared for her life as Owens yelled and pounded on the door.


Marion County investigators determined that Florida’s Stand Your Ground law did not apply to Lorincz’s actions: you cannot shoot through a door at an unarmed person and legally claim justifiable self-defense under the statute. Despite this, the invocation of Stand Your Ground created legal and procedural complexity around the case, as prosecutors were required to prove that Lorincz did not have a “reasonable belief” that her life was in danger, a subjective standard. Florida was the first state to pass a modern “Shoot First” law, and research has shown its implementation was associated with a 24% increase in monthly homicide rates and a 32% increase in monthly firearm homicide rates. In Stand Your Ground states, homicides in which white shooters kill Black victims are deemed justifiable five times more frequently than when the situation is reversed.


Charges, Verdict & Sentencing

Lorincz was originally charged with first-degree manslaughter, culpable negligence, battery, and two counts of assault. The State Attorney’s Office, led by Bill Gladson, declined to upgrade the charge to second-degree murder, citing insufficient evidence to prove the “depraved heart” element required for that charge. Civil rights organizations and Owens’ family advocated strongly for a murder charge throughout the proceedings.

The trial took place in August 2024 at the Marion County Circuit Court. The jury, six persons, all white, found Lorincz guilty of Manslaughter by Use of a Firearm on August 16, 2024, after approximately 2.5 hours of deliberation. Judge Robert Hodges characterized the shooting as “entirely unnecessary”. He acknowledged Lorincz’s history as a survivor of childhood sexual abuse and her clean criminal record but imposed a 25-year sentence, five years below the maximum of 30.

At sentencing, Lorincz stated: “I am so sorry I took AJ’s life. I never intended to kill her.”


Post-Conviction Developments

Lorincz filed a formal appeal to overturn her conviction in January 2025. As of late 2025, she is incarcerated at Homestead Correctional Institution in Miami-Dade County. Owens’ mother, Pamela Dias, filed a wrongful death lawsuit against Lorincz and the property owner, Charles Gabbard, alleging Gabbard should have known of Lorincz’s “propensity for gross negligence and/or intentional harm”. In response, Lorincz wrote a handwritten letter to the court indicating she intends to countersue Owens’ mother, Owens’ minor children, and Gabbard for “slander, libel and defamation of character for damages exceeding $50,000”. As of late 2025, no attorney represented Lorincz in the civil matter and no hearing dates had been set.


Media & Cultural Impact

The case received national and international attention as a flashpoint in ongoing debates about Stand Your Ground laws, racial bias in self-defense claims, and the policing of Black families in shared residential spaces. The Netflix documentary The Perfect Neighbor (2025), directed by Geeta Gandbhir and composed largely of police body camera footage, brought a second wave of public attention to the case after its premiere at Sundance Film Festival. Owens’ mother, Pamela Dias, stated after the sentencing: “Now we can forge on the path of true healing that we so often speak about.”


KlueIQ Investigative Framework Notes

Investigative NodeKey Data Point
Pre-emptive Victimhood2.5+ years of one-sided complaints establishing Lorincz as “victim” in official record
Narrative ConstructionLorincz recorded children, erected signs, created paper trail prior to shooting
911 Pre-stagingCall made before shot was fired; Lorincz narrated a threat that had not yet materialized
Physical Evidence ContradictionDoor intact; no forced entry; contradicts “imminent danger” claim
Legal Charge GapManslaughter vs. second-degree murder debate; “depraved heart” element not charged
Racial Disparity IndicatorAll-white jury; racial slurs documented by witnesses; five-to-one Stand Your Ground disparity in white-on-Black cases
Civil Litigation OngoingWrongful death suit filed; Lorincz countersuing victim’s children as of Nov. 2025
Appeal FiledConviction appeal filed January 2025; status ongoing