The last person wanted in a June 25 home invasion in Enfield, one who reportedly said he had no intention of surrendering, was apprehended Sunday by Rocky Mount police.

Marcus Manquell Bell, 26, was apprehended by the police department's patrol division, according to a press release from Detective J. Puhak of the Halifax County Sheriff's Office.

Bell was jailed on $30,000 bond and has a September 21 court date in Halifax County, as do the other three charged in the crime.

Puhak said Bell communicated through sources he had no intention of giving up following the botched home invasion in which one of the alleged participants was shot and killed by the homeowner.

Rocky Mount police detectives J. Scott Hale and T.J. Blunt were instrumental in doggedly looking for Bell, Puhak said.

On Sunday Bell was captured by patrol officers. Lieutenant Bobby Martin said Bell was arrested without incident.

Bell, like the rest of the those in custody in the case, faces charges of first degree burglary, conspiracy to commit robbery with a dangerous weapon, discharging a firearm into an occupied dwelling and contributing to the delinquency and abuse of a juvenile.

Four people are now in custody in the botched robbery attempt, the last arrested before Bell being Martaveon Kewanty Lynch, 17, of the Rocky Mount and Battleboro area.

Lynch was the the third person to be arrested in the case after Jasmine Deshaunda Graham and Diamate Dayshaun Harrell turned themselves in last month.

The home invasion occurred around 4:45 a.m. on June 25 when Marqiz Te'vonn Thomas, 17, was killed when he and the others broke into a house on Highway 481 in the Enfield area.

Thomas, who was on a weekend pass from the Edgecombe Youth Development Center, was shot in the head with his own weapon, which was wrested from him during a struggle with the homeowner.

Thomas was being held in the youth center for a crime similar to what occurred that morning.

The sheriff's office confirmed the four suspects did fire back after their alleged accomplice was killed by the home owner. That is reflected in the shooting into an occupied dwelling charge.

The homeowner heard footsteps on the porch and, looking through a peephole, saw the suspects, who kicked in the door.

A fight ensued and the homeowner was able to get Thomas' gun, a .38-caliber weapon, and shoot him in the head. The suspect died instantly.

The sheriff's office described the home invasion as a targeted crime and not a random act.

The homeowner will not be charged.