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Rashawn Williams is charged with the murder of Abdul Vicks, also known as YBC Dul

An 18-year-old has been charged with fatally shooting a local West Philadelphia rapper and gang leader – the second teenager in two months to be charged with the high-profile murder.

Rashawn Williams, 18, was arrested Tuesday and charged with the murder of Abdul Vicks, the 25-year-old rapper who belongs to the West Philadelphia-based gang Young Bag Chasers (YBC).

Vicks, also known as YBC Dul or “Mr. “Disrespectful” was shot multiple times in a drive-by-style shooting in Olney on August 23rd. Vicks had just picked up a friend and was driving down the 100 block of West Olney Avenue when a white car stopped next to him at a stoplight. At least two people fired several shots at Vicks' car before speeding away, police said.

Vicks was struck multiple times in the chest and hand. Panicked, his friend drove back to his home on North Sixth Street and then, with the help of his uncle, rushed Vicks to Einstein Medical Center, where he died just before 4 p.m

Williams' arrest follows that of 16-year-old Aiden Waters, who was accused of killing Vicks and two other shootings in North Philadelphia in early September. Waters and Williams are both members of Fastbreak, a previously little-known gang that has ties to Fourth Street and Nedro and Spencer Streets in Olney, according to court records and a law enforcement source.

Law enforcement said it was not immediately clear why the teens targeted Vicks, who had made many enemies throughout the city because the cruel lyrics of his songs often mocked people killed or shot by his gang and others were. Assistant District Attorney Cydney Pope said at an earlier news conference that Fastbreak was likely “looking for notoriety” – a growing reason for shootings in recent years as drill rap music becomes more popular.

The night Vicks was killed, police said they recovered the shooters' getaway car in the 6900 block of North 15th Street. The car – which had been stolen a week earlier in Cheltenham Township – was burned, but investigators recovered ballistics evidence inside as well as a number of fingerprints on the doors, the affidavit said.

” READ MORE: Defying the Code of Silence: How a Teen Helped Solve Four Murders and Convict a West Philly Gang

Those fingerprints and bullet casings — as well as witness interviews, surveillance footage and prison visits — eventually led investigators to Waters and Williams.

Williams was also charged with attempted murder, theft of a motor vehicle, conspiracy and related offenses.

This is a developing story and will be updated.