Former Hattiesburg High School standout football star De’Andre Humbles has run afoul of the law again, recently being arrested and charged with disorderly conduct (interfering with a business).
According to the jail docket provided by the Forrest County Sheriff’s Department, Humbles was taken into custody by deputies and booked into the Forrest County Correctional Facility. According to the department’s website, he is no longer being held at the jail, but additional information regarding the incident is not yet available.
In late 2017, Humbles, then 18 years old, was one of nine people arrested after a shooting at Bonhomie Apartments on Country Club Road in Hattiesburg. He, along with his brother D’Vonte Humbles, was charged with criminal street gang activity and conspiracy to commit aggravated assault, as were Armonte Canamore, Meredith Austin, Phillip Little, Daija Tate, Rashad Marshall and Willie Edna Wilson.
Marshall and Austin also were each charged with two counts of aggravated assault. The Humbles brothers and Canamore faced additional charges of aggravated assault and shooting into an occupied dwelling.
The ninth suspect, Deidre Burns, was charged with accessory before the fact.
All suspects were Hattiesburg residents at the time of the incident.
Throughout the course of the investigation, police recovered approximately 70 shell casings at the scene of the crime. Three male victims suffered gunshot wounds during the incident; two were treated at Forrest General Hospital and the third was released at the scene.
At the time, police said the Humbles brothers, Burns, Canamore and Little were affiliated with the Vice Lords gang, which began in Chicago. Wilson, Marshall, Austin and Tate were allegedly members of the Hoovers gang, which originated in Los Angeles.
According to www.forrestms.mugshots.zone, D’Andre Humbles was arrested again in late June by officers of the Hattiesburg Police Department and charged with domestic violence/simple assault.
Humbles played wide receiver and quarterback for the Hattiesburg Tigers football team. In 2017, he put up more than 1,000 receiving yards for the team, which fell to West Point in that year’s state title game. He was a three-star recruit.