Father shoots toddler in Las Vegas standoff before police kill him

A domestic dispute in Las Vegas escalated into tragedy when Quinton Baker fatally shot his 3-year-old son Kentre while holding him hostage, prompting police to open fire on Baker. The incident unfolded early on February 3 at an apartment complex on South Maryland Parkway. The boy's mother, Raneka Pate, has criticized the police response and plans legal action.

The fatal shooting occurred around 1:18 a.m. on February 3 at an apartment in the 8400 block of South Maryland Parkway in Las Vegas, Nevada. According to Las Vegas Metropolitan Police, Quinton Baker, the father of 3-year-old Kentre Baker, engaged in an escalating argument with the boy's mother, Raneka Pate. Pate reported in a 911 call that Baker had assaulted her friend and attempted to harm her during the dispute.

Baker then took Kentre to his vehicle, a blue Ford, and tried to place the child inside. As Pate intervened, Baker fired shots at her and her friend's white BMW, per witness accounts and police reports. A neighbor called 911 around 1:29 a.m., describing the chaos: "A couple were out here screaming and arguing... Eventually, a man came out with a gun and a kid. He threw the kid in a blue Ford… but before he peeled out of here, he took a shot at the white BMW."

Baker returned to the apartment with Kentre, where the confrontation continued. Pate made another 911 call, stating, "He's threatening to kill me and my son. He literally beat me… He's crazy. He's in the house with him." Body camera footage captured Baker cradling Kentre while pointing a gun at the child's head. Clark County Assistant Sheriff Bryan Peterson detailed at a February 5 press conference that Baker had warned Pate: "If you don't tell them to call this s— off, and if they try to come up these stairs I'm blowing the child's brains out and I'm blowing mine out. You won't have neither one of us."

Peterson emphasized, "That child was being held hostage, and the suspect's intent was clearly stated by him to the mother several times. He was going to kill that child and then kill himself." When officers arrived, Baker fired at Kentre, striking him in the head at close range. Police then shot Baker dead. Kentre also sustained a leg wound from police gunfire, but the coroner ruled the head wound from Baker's shot as the cause of death.

Peterson noted the officers' dilemma: "In this situation, officers have milliseconds to make a decision. Their ultimate goal is to save that baby's life. That suspect chose those actions and followed through with what his intent was. He killed his son."

Pate, who described Baker as "not in his right mind" during her initial 911 call, later told KSNV that she had urged police to de-escalate: "I told police officers that the person was very agitated, and that if they could do anything to calm or deescalate the situation, without any lethal force because he did have my son in his possession." She has retained attorney Ofelia Markarian and blames the police for the outcome. The involved officers are on administrative leave pending a review expected to last several months.

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