LaSheena Weekly Bio
LaSheena Weekly is an American controversial mother famously known for being the mother of FBG Duck, an American rapper whose real name was Carlton Weekly, he was shot and killed in 2020 in the upscale Chicago community of Gold Coast.
LaSheena Weekly Age
LaSheena Weekly is over 40 years old as of 2023, she was born in the United States of America. She has been celebrating her birthday every year together with her family and friends. We are keeping tabs on LaSheena’s age and will update this section with more information about her date of birth once it becomes available.
Carlton Weekly, alias FBG Duck, her son, was just 26 years old when he was killed.
LaSheena Weekly Height
Weekly stands at an average height of 5 feet, 6 inches, or approximately 1.69 meters. Her weight, hair color, eye color, waist, and bust size will be updated as soon as the details are available.
LaSheena Weekly Parents
LaSheena Weekly was born to both parents (mother and father) in a large family setting in California.
Details about her mother and father’s names and what they did for a living are currently unavailable; however, she was raised alongside her siblings.
Still, as soon as we have reliable information about her father, mother, brothers, and sisters, we will let everyone in Abby LaSheena’s family know.
LaSheena Weekly Husband
LaSheena’s husband, the father of FBG Duck is not publicly known as of 2023.
LaSheena Weekly Son death
FBG Duck, real name Carlton Weekly, was shot up to 21 times during the daytime attack on Aug. 4, 2020, which also injured his girlfriend and another person waiting in line with him at the Dolce & Gabbana store, 68 E. Oak St.
According to police records, two weeks later, an informant in Chicago police custody told detectives and FBI agents that someone affiliated with the Black Disciples street gang offered $50,000 “to anyone who killed Weekly” and later raised the bounty to $100,000.
Another informant told investigators, “Duck had a price on his head,” according to the records.
The identity of the person who is said to have placed the bounty has been withheld. However, the informant provided some critical identifying information: The individual had purchased custom-made necklaces for members of the O Block faction of the Black Disciples.
An FBI affidavit filed in March 2021 seeking permission to examine data from three suspects in the shooting noted that slain rapper King Von, real name Dayvon Bennett, appeared in a YouTube video posted days after Weekly’s death that shows him “acquiring valuable O-Block pendants for his associates.”
Bennett is possibly the most well-known figure associated with O Block, a set associated with the Parkway Gardens low-income housing development near 64th Street and South Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Drive.
Prosecutors accused five O Block “members and associates” of killing Weekly in a federal racketeering and murder indictment issued in September 2021, months after Bennett was gunned down in Atlanta: Charles “C Murda” Liggins, Kenneth “Kenny” or “Kenny Mac” Roberson, Tacarlos “Los” Offerd, Christopher “C Thang” Thomas, and Marcus “Muwop” Smart. All are awaiting their trials. According to police records, a sixth suspect committed suicide just over a month earlier.
According to the FBI affidavit, Bennett discussed various jewelry designs for members of his crew, including “Muwop” and “C Murda,” in the YouTube video.
According to court records, the informant told investigators that Roberson didn’t want the jewelry because he was a member of the Gangster Disciples’ Dip Set faction, despite the fact that he considered Parkway Gardens his “second home.”
Weekly was identified as a member of the Gangster Disciples’ STL/EBT, or Tookaville, faction, which the police say has allied with the gang’s Jaro City faction and has an ongoing feud with O Block.
Weekly had been “leery of letting people know his whereabouts because he had received death threats from opposing gang members in the drill rap scene,” according to police records.
He was right to be concerned. Police were reviewing surveillance footage from another Oak Street store when they heard someone on a cellphone say he saw “Duck” less than a half-hour before the shooting. The person on the phone entered the Moncler store with another person, claiming that someone with a gun was chasing them.
According to the search warrant affidavit, O Block members fled Parkway Gardens about 20 minutes before the shooting in a Ford Fusion and a Chrysler 300.
Investigators later tracked the cars’ paths to the crime scene using automated license-plate readers and various cameras.
According to the affidavit, the cars pulled in front of Weekly’s girlfriend’s sedan on Oak Street at 4:26 p.m. on the day of the shooting, and two men jumped out of the Ford and targeted Weekly, while two others jumped out of the Chrysler and fired at the rapper and his girlfriend.
The gunmen then fled in the two cars registered to Offerd and Roberson.
According to police records, investigators had “high confidence” that ballistic evidence recovered at the scene was linked to five other shootings in which one person was killed and five others were injured. According to court records, no one has been arrested in connection with those shootings.
Roberson was the first person apprehended in Weekly’s death. He was arrested in February 2021, just weeks after being charged with first-degree murder in connection with a shooting in Dolton that killed a man and injured two women. Roberson, who is in federal custody, has also been charged with dozens of felonies in that case.
The conflict between Tookaville and O Block has been frequently memorialized in disrespectful rap songs and videos, including one released by Weekly in July 2020. He rapped in it, “I said I wasn’t going to diss the dead, and OK, I did it.”
According to the affidavit, Weekly then “mentions, in a derogatory manner, nine names, aliases, and/or monikers of deceased individuals,” all of whom are believed to be Black Disciples.
Among them was Odee Perry, O Block’s namesake, who was shot and killed in 2011 at the age of 20, according to the affidavit.
Perry’s death sparked a string of retaliatory shootings, including the 2014 killing of Gakirah Barnes, a female gang assassin for a Gangster Disciples faction, according to police.
According to police records, the case was closed later that year after Cook County prosecutors rejected charges against the main suspect, Bennett, who went on to become known as King Von.
Bennett was already facing felony charges in connection with another murder at the time. In that case, he was found not guilty on all 24 counts.
According to the FBI affidavit, Bennett responded to his diss track the next day with his own song, in which he appears to take aim at Shondale “Tooka” Gregory, who was shot to death in 2011 at the age of 15.
According to the affidavit, Weekly described Gregory as a close friend in an interview with a rap-centric media outlet and said his set began using the name Tookaville after his death.
“Tooka in my lungs, I say that every time, cause he got smoked,” Bennett rapped while wearing an O Block chain in a music video.
Bennett also made a dig at Weekly, saying, “O Block, OTF, 300, b——, just check the stats, n—— said that he be thrown’ shots, I bet he catch them back.”
The verse was interpreted by investigators as a “reference to negative repercussions coming to Weekly as a result of Weekly’s disrespect.”
When U.S. Attorney John Lausch announced the charges in Weekly’s murder in October 2021, he said the online sparring common in the drill rap scene “shows you what’s going on in this city.”
“People are threatening to commit violent acts and then either bragging about violent acts or talking about how they’re going to retaliate for other violent acts,” Lausch said. “It occurs on a regular basis.”
Bennett was killed in a mass shooting outside an Atlanta hookah lounge on November 6, 2020, just a week after his debut album was released.
Authorities believe he was shot by a friend of another popular rapper, Quando Rondo.
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The mother of late rapper FBG Duck has launched her own OnlyFans page.
LaSheena Weekly hopped on social media to promote her page. “That’s what I’m talking about, my content fire as hell,” she said via livestream. “And I’m grown, and I can do what I wanna do.”