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16-year-old girl fatally stabbed outside Washington, DC McDonald’s in dispute over sauce

Marlene Lenthang
2 min read
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A dispute over sauce outside a Washington, D.C., McDonald’s escalated into the fatal stabbing of a 16-year-old, police said.

Naima Liggon, of Waldorf, Maryland, died in the early Sunday violence, Metropolitan Police in the nation’s capital said in a news release.

Police said the stabbing unfolded outside a McDonald’s in the 1900 block of 14th Street, Northwest.

Liggon was transported to a hospital in a private vehicle, police said. Officers responded to the hospital just after 2 a.m. on a report of a teen girl with stab wounds, and despite life-saving efforts, she died.

Naima Liggon. (Family photo / via NBC Washington)
Naima Liggon. (Family photo / via NBC Washington)

Later Sunday, police said a 16-year-old girl, also of Waldorf, was arrested, and found in possession of a knife.

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She has been charged with second-degree murder while armed, assault with intent to kill, aggravated assault, felony assault and carrying a dangerous weapon, NBC Washington reported.

The teen appeared at a hearing Monday in D.C. Superior Court and Detective Brendan Jasper testified that Liggon was stabbed in an argument over “sweet-and-sour sauce” among three girls outside the McDonald’s just after 2 a.m., The Washington Post reported.

Liggon and another girl began hitting the 16-year-old suspect and as they tried to get into the vehicle, the suspect teen “lunged” at Liggon with a 7 1/2-inch pocketknife, hitting her in the chest and abdomen, he testified.

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The teen charged pleaded not involved, which is the juvenile equivalent of not guilty, The Post reported. Her attorney argued she acted in self-defense in the dispute started by the others, as prosecutors argued she was the only person who brought a knife to a fistfight.

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“At the end of the day, someone is dead over a dispute over sauce,” D.C. Superior Court Judge Sherri Beatty-Arthur said, according to the outlet.

Liggon was a student at Thomas Stone High School in Waldorf.

curfew for youth in certain areas of Washington, D.C., will start Friday in a city effort to buckle down on violent juvenile crime. Under the curfew, children 16 and younger must be off the streets from 11 p.m. to 6 a.m. on weekdays and midnight to 6 a.m. on weekends. The curfew plans were in place before the stabbing.

This story first appeared on NBCNews.com.

This article was originally published on TODAY.com

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