A Manhattan murderer who turned a Queens baby shower into a bloodbath has been slapped with 19 years to life behind bars, prosecutors crowed Wednesday. Tajai Holman, 27, blasted away at a BMW with a 9mm pistol, missing his target but drilling a bullet into the forehead of 19-year-old Reon Cambridge, who was just along for the ride.
Brooklyn DA Eric Gonzalez didn’t mince words after the sentencing, calling it “an appalling act of gun violence that turned a celebration of new life into senseless tragedy.” The grim scene unfolded back on March 6, 2021, when Holman rolled up to the shindig on Weirfield Street in Ridgewood, packing heat and a bad attitude.
According to the DA, trouble brewed around 9:50 p.m. when Holman got into it with another guest. Things went from tense to deadly fast. By 12:53 a.m., the other guy peeled out in his 2018 BMW X6 M, with Cambridge riding shotgun. Holman wasn’t letting it slide—he chased the SUV down and unloaded five rounds at its tail end. Miraculously, he missed.
But the night wasn’t over. An hour later, at 1:52 a.m., the BMW cruised back to the party—Cambridge still in the passenger seat. Holman, apparently waiting, stepped up like a Wild West gunslinger, aimed at the front of the ride, and squeezed off five more shots. This time, he didn’t miss. One slug smashed through Cambridge’s forehead, turning the teen’s night into his last. The driver dumped him at Brookdale Hospital in Brooklyn, where docs pronounced him dead.
“This sentence sends a message,” Gonzalez thundered. “We have zero tolerance for shootings in our communities, and those who pull the trigger will pay.” He offered a somber nod to Cambridge’s family, rocked by the “tremendous loss.”
Holman’s fate was sealed after a jury nailed him for second-degree murder on December 17, 2024. On Wednesday, Brooklyn Supreme Court Justice Dineen Riviezzo dropped the hammer, locking him up for 19 years to life. Cops nabbed the shooter two months after the killing, on May 19, 2021, thanks to a 67th Precinct probe that leaned on detective work, digital evidence, and tech wizards from the DA’s office.
For a night that was supposed to welcome a new baby, it ended with a kid in a coffin—and a gunman who’ll have decades in a cell to think about it.