Because of a gap in how women are searched before entering Augie's Cabaret, a 29-year-old woman was able to sneak in a handgun and shoot an adversary in the head, the owner of the downtown Minneapolis strip club said Tuesday.
Jasmine N. Jones, 29, of St. Paul, was charged Tuesday with quickly and fatally ending her "ongoing feud" with 32-year-old LaKisha Neal around 1 a.m. Saturday near the back of the Hennepin Avenue nightspot.
Charged with second-degree murder, Jones remains jailed in lieu of $1 million bail ahead of a court appearance Wednesday afternoon.
Augie's owner Brian Michael, whose club is staffed with several security personnel and equipped with extensive video surveillance and a metal detector at the door, said Jones avoided being caught coming in with a gun "by concealing her firearm in her crotch area."
Michael said Jones and her purse were searched after she set off the metal detector and she was asked whether she had a firearm, a question all patrons are asked at the door, Michael added. She responded that she did not and was allowed to enter, he said.
"We did not grab her crotch area," Michael said, adding that his security staff includes men and women.
"It's fundamentally more difficult to search women than men," the club owner said, noting that women tend to have more metal on them in the forms of jewelry, piercings or wiring as part of their undergarments. "There are gender sensitivities when searching a woman. … She took advantage of that. [How she hid the gun] was outside of our imagination."
As for searching men, Michael said, they "are not given the same courtesies. We'll make men go through more. ... I don't care as much how a guy might be humiliated."