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Inset left: Amunique Cavitt (Sedgwick County Jail). Inset right: Norman Carter III (Obituary). Background: The residential street where Cavitt shot and killed Carter in Wichita, Kan. (Google Maps).
A woman from Kansas is set to spend several years in prison for fatally shooting her boyfriend on his birthday.
In December 2025, a jury found 21-year-old Amunique Schare Cavitt guilty of second-degree murder in the death of 33-year-old Norman Eugene “Tray” Carter III.
On Friday, Cavitt received a sentence of 13 years and nine months behind bars, as announced by the Sedgwick County District Attorney’s Office.
The tragic event unfolded on April 23, 2024, outside a home located on North Minnesota Avenue in Wichita.
Authorities arrived at the scene around 12:15 p.m., responding to reports of a shooting. They discovered Carter with multiple gunshot wounds to his upper body, as reported by Wichita’s ABC affiliate KAKE. He was quickly transported to a nearby hospital, where he later died from his injuries.
Earlier that morning, Cavitt and Carter were driving together when they began arguing, according to a probable cause affidavit obtained by Wichita-based NBC and Telemundo affiliate KSN-TV.
The woman, for her part, said her boyfriend slapped her, hit her several times on the head and tried to strangle her. Police noted the presence of some scratches on Cavitt’s neck, but no other visible injuries, according to the affidavit.
At the intersection of Minnesota Avenue and 13th Street, Carter got out of the Jeep. One witness said it appeared Cavitt tried to run him over after he left the SUV. Then, the woman also got out of the Jeep and unleashed a torrent of gunfire at the man.
The shooting continued even after Carter was on the ground, according to the charging document obtained by The Wichita Eagle. Police would find seven shell casings in the grass near the man’s body.
Carter’s obituary remembers him fondly:
Tray was very talented, creative, passionate, and smart. He achieved everything he set his mind to and motivated others to do the same…Most of all, he was a loving father to his daughter Nakori. Tray loved his daughter more than anything. She was the light in his eyes and the joy in his heart. There are no words that can describe just how much Tray loved his daughter. She was his most precious gift in this world and he will forever be her Angel.
The defendant was arrested later that same afternoon and charged with one count of first-degree murder. She was detained in the Sedgwick County Jail on $1 million bond where she remained through the entirety of her trial.
The jury was given the option of convicting Cavitt on the more serious murder charge, but opted for second-degree murder instead.