Police hold 2 teen suspects in killing of Kansas City chef Shaun Brady, as Irish community mourns
August 29, 2024 | Peggy Lowe
Editor’s note: The following story was published by KCUR, Kansas City’s NPR member station, and a fellow member of the KC Media Collective. Click here to read the original story or here to sign up for KCUR’s email newsletter.
Brady & Fox chef Shaun Brady was a key organizer in Kansas City’s Irish Fest, which is scheduled to go on this weekend; His killing comes amidst community outcry about the rising number of property crimes in Kansas City, many of which are being committed by juveniles with guns
Kansas City Police announced that two juvenile male suspects are being investigated in connection to the homicide of popular Irish chef and Kansas City Irish Fest organizer Shaun Brady, who was fatally shot while trying to intervene in a possible car burglary.
Brady, 44, was the co-owner of Brady & Fox restaurant and Lounge. He was shot about 5:18 p.m. Wednesday at 63rd Street and Rockhill Road, near his restaurant.
“Preliminary investigation revealed the victim was taking out trash when he observed multiple subjects by a vehicle. An interaction between the victim and subjects occurred that led to the victim being shot,” said KCPD Sgt. Phillip DiMartino.
“Within an hour of the incident occurring two juvenile male teen subjects were taken into custody pending further investigation in regard to this case,” DiMartino said in an update Thursday morning. “The vehicle used in the crime was also recovered. The subjects were taken into custody and the vehicle was found a short distance away in Midtown.”
The teens have not been formally arrested or charged in the case yet.
The news of Brady’s death quickly spread on social media Wednesday evening, and there was an outpouring of grief from the Irish community and Brookside residents.
Brady was the creator of the Kansas City Irish Breakfast, which always follows a Catholic Mass on Sundays during the city’s annual Irish Fest, scheduled for this weekend at Crown Center downtown.
In a Facebook post, Kansas City Irish Fest organizers said their hearts were “absolutely broken” to learn of Brady’s death. While the Irish Fest will go on as scheduled, organizers said they would cancel the Irish Breakfast “to give those who knew and loved Shaun a chance to gather and remember him.”
“It was one of Shaun’s greatest gifts to bring people together with his culinary creations,” the post said.
“Can make no sense of it,” Kerry Browne, the owner of Browne’s Irish Marketplace, said in a Facebook post that included Brady’s photo with her son.
Speaking on KCUR’s Up To Date on Thursday morning, Jackson County Prosecutor Jean Peters Baker held back tears as she said she regretted not stopping recently at Brady’s pub to see her friend.
“My heart’s really broken. I vacillate from anger and outrage to all those personal feelings of why, why, why,” Baker said. “Why was this man’s life taken? What could have been done? What can be done still?”
Baker said she didn’t want to endanger Brady and others because she has received so many threats since her office’s prosecution of Eric DeValkeneare, a now-former KCPD detective who was convicted in the killing of Cameron Lamb — the first KCPD officer to ever be convicted for the fatal shooting of a Black man. Missouri Gov. Mike Parson, a Republican, has been publicly weighing whether to give a pardon to DeValkeneare.
As with Brady’s case, Baker said she is seeing a trend of rising property crimes that end in tragedy.
“It seems as if more juveniles are engaged in stolen autos that also turn violent or their willingness to turn violent, to steal vehicles,” Baker said. “It feels prevalent right now.”
Baker’s office would not handle the case if the suspects are charged as juveniles, because it would be assigned to family court. Only if a judge decides that a juvenile can be tried as an adult would her office take it up.
Mayor Quinton Lucas, in a lengthy Facebook post, said he grieved for the man who inspired him as he built his business and community. Lucas noted that residents of Brookside, Waldo, the Crossroads and along Prospect Avenue have recently expressed their concerns about the rise and property and nuisance crimes.
“For months, community members have cried out for a response from institutions, including our police, our electeds, our county justice apparatus, and all with some role in making things better, explaining that a failure to address would lead to more violent criminal activity,” Lucas said. “You have heard from us many reasons, but none are sufficient.”
Lucas suggested that KCPD should return to a policy where there are arrests for all criminal state law and ordinance violations that pose a threat to public safety; better deployment of officers to increase patrols in hardest hit areas; expand detention center capacity, including space that has been budgeted for 100 people at the downtown KCPD headquarters.
Last year, Kansas City set a record high for homicides, with 185.

2024 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Q&A: Founder Jy Maze on the industry that runs the world (and delivers the toilet paper)
Everything has to ship, said Jy Maze. From the microphone in her hand to the stool where she sat to the shoes on the Maze Freight Solutions founder’s feet, it all comes with mileage and a cost, she said. Her woman-owned, Overland Park-based, third-party freight logistics startup itself was packed in 2017 when Maze decided…
AI smart sensor startup Particle Space earns ‘Top 50 Tech Companies’ distinction
A virtually hardware-free property and building management platform from Particle Space earned the Kansas City-based startup high honors this month at Intercon in Las Vegas. “The future is bright, all buildings will communicate every interworking detail,” said David Biga, founder of Particle Space, which uses artificial intelligence and smart sensors for its residential and commercial…
Got ideas for real-world events? Global Entrepreneurship Week accepting 2019 submissions
A weeklong event elevating the doers, dreamers and makers at the heartbeat of Kansas City small business needs the community’s help, Jenny Miller said. Organizers of Global Entrepreneurship Week — set for Nov. 18-22 in Kansas City — are now accepting event submissions for this year’s celebration, said Miller, network builder at KCSourceLink and chair of…
KCMO advancing its smart city action plan with focus on digital equity in urban tech
Kansas City is one step closer to being a fully connected hub for urban tech, as local decision makers craft a smart city action plan. “That document will be what guides all of our future investments in technology,” explained Chris Hernandez, KCMO communications director. The action plan comes a year after the city issued a…
