A flicker of flame near the car — and the evidence almost vanished with it.
On a Saturday afternoon in late May 2024, at roughly a quarter to four, Baltimore police were called to the 900 block of North Dukeland Street. Two juveniles had been shot. One of them, Denzel Johnson, would not survive. He was taken to the University of Maryland Shock Trauma Hospital, where he died from his wounds. The second victim was rushed to Johns Hopkins Hospital and lived.
Nearly seven hours later, investigators were still working the case. Around ten o'clock that night, detectives began canvassing near the 4600 block of Rokeby Road, following a lead on a vehicle believed to be connected to the shooting. They spotted it — moving east through the area — and fell in behind it. The car didn't get far. It veered off the road and into a tree line along the 3900 block of Stokes Drive.
Two men climbed out and moved toward the back of the car. Officers watching from a distance noticed what appeared to be a flicker of flame near where the men were standing. Fearing the car — and whatever evidence it held — was about to be destroyed, they moved in. The men bolted into the woods on foot.
About two blocks north, near the 4100 block of Stokes Drive, the pair emerged from the tree line. Officers caught one of them, later identified as Korey Hopson. The other, Charles Robinson, disappeared from view and was not immediately apprehended.
What police found inside the abandoned vehicle told a story. There was a bottle of Safeway brand lighter fluid. Surveillance footage from a Safeway store confirmed that Hopson had purchased it. A ski mask was also recovered from the car. DNA testing later matched both the lighter fluid bottle and the mask to Hopson. Fingerprints belonging to both men were found inside the vehicle.
Hopson's arrest also yielded his cell phone. Investigators used the cellular data on it to identify a phone number connected to Robinson, and that thread eventually led to his arrest as well. Neither man was legally permitted to carry a firearm — both had prior convictions that barred them from possessing weapons.
This week, a jury returned guilty verdicts against both Robinson and Hopson on charges of first-degree murder and second-degree murder, along with a collection of related charges. The convictions stem directly from the killing of Denzel Johnson and the wounding of the second juvenile on that May afternoon.
Deputy State's Attorney Thomas M. Donnelly credited the outcome to the work of the Baltimore Police Department's Homicide Unit and the Regional Auto Theft Task Force, saying his prosecutors fought hard for justice on behalf of both young victims.
Sentencing is scheduled for January 8, 2026. Robinson faces a life term plus an additional 45 years. Hopson faces life plus 35 years. For the family of Denzel Johnson, the verdicts close one chapter — the longer wait now is for the sentences to be handed down.
Notable Quotes
Our prosecutors zealously advocated for justice for these two young victims. We were able to secure the convictions of two violent offenders who now face serious time.— Deputy State's Attorney Thomas M. Donnelly
The Hearth Conversation Another angle on the story
What strikes you most about how this case came together?
The lighter fluid. That one detail — a man buying accelerant at a grocery store, on camera — became the thread that unraveled everything.
The investigators moved fast. Hours after the shooting they were already tracking the car.
And they had to move faster when they saw that flame flicker near the vehicle. A few more seconds and the physical evidence might have been gone.
Both men had prior convictions. Does that change how you read the story?
It adds weight to the sentencing numbers. The law treats repeat offenders differently, and the charges here already carried life terms before any enhancements.
Denzel Johnson is named. The second victim isn't. Why does that distinction matter?
One of them died. The other is still alive, and protecting a living juvenile's identity is standard practice. But naming Johnson matters — it keeps him from becoming just a statistic.
The car drove into a tree line. Do we know why?
The source doesn't say. It could have been panic, an attempt to hide the vehicle, or both. What we know is it stopped them from getting much further.
A cell phone cracked the second arrest. That's become almost routine now.
It has. Cellular data is often the quietest witness in a case — no one thinks about it in the moment, and it doesn't forget.
Sentencing isn't until January 2026. That's more than a year away.
That's not unusual for cases of this magnitude. The verdicts are in, but the legal process has its own pace, and both sides will have time to prepare arguments for the judge.