Prosper woman jailed after three shootings target same house
A Prosper woman was jailed after police tied her to three early-morning shootings at the same Oakbrook Street house. Investigators are still searching for two men and two vehicles linked to the attacks.

A 20-year-old Prosper woman is in jail after police said three separate early-morning shootings targeted the same house in the 1100 block of Oakbrook Street, rattling a neighborhood that has now seen repeated gunfire at one address. Mariha Marie Bullock was arrested early Saturday and charged with Deadly Conduct after investigators said the shootings were not random and that more suspects remain at large.
Prosper police said the home was hit first on June 4, when the same Audi returned during two bursts of gunfire. The first shooting came around 1:30 a.m., and about an hour later another round of shots struck the property again. Police said a third attack followed in the early hours of June 6, when surveillance video captured two unidentified suspects approaching on foot and firing roughly a dozen rounds at the house around 1:20 a.m.
No one was injured in any of the shootings, but police said the house and at least one vehicle were struck by bullets. Officers quickly set up a perimeter after the June 6 incident and, with help from the Elm Ridge Police Department, took Bullock into custody. She was booked into the Denton County Jail, and her bond was set at $25,000.
Investigators are still looking for two unidentified male suspects described as Black men between 20 and 30 years old. They are also searching for two vehicles linked to the shootings: a white Audi hatchback and a newer blue Cadillac sedan. Police said about 10 more rounds were fired when the Audi returned later on June 4, deepening concerns that the same people or vehicles were involved in more than one attack.
Prosper police have increased patrols and tactical resources in the area while working with the Celina Police Department and other neighboring agencies. Officers also urged residents to check and share any doorbell, home-security, or vehicle-camera footage from the relevant timeframes, hoping nearby video could help identify the remaining suspects before another home is put at risk.
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