CHAMPAIGN, IL (Chambana Today) – Zaire Herman, 22, of Urbana, has been sentenced to 80 years in prison for the March 16 murder of Anthony Miller, 31, of Champaign, following a deadly shooting at the Oakwood Trace Apartment complex that left Miller dead and his three young children traumatized.
The sentencing was handed down by Judge Randy Rosenbaum on August 1, after a jury found Herman guilty on June 11 of first-degree murder and unlawful use of a weapon by a felon. Herman will serve 75 years for the murder, plus 5 years for the weapons charge, consecutively.
Judge Rosenbaum called Herman “one of the most dangerous persons I’ve ever seen” and noted that the length of the sentence reflects both the violent nature of the crime and Herman’s extensive criminal history. Because first-degree murder is a “truth in sentencing” offense in Illinois, Herman will not be eligible for parole or early release.
The fatal shooting occurred when Herman, caught on video wearing distinctive clothing, fired at least 19 rounds into a van parked at the Oakwood Trace complex. Inside the vehicle were Miller and his three minor children. Miller was struck and killed, while the children escaped physical harm.
Herman fled the scene but was quickly located nearby — still wearing the same clothing captured on surveillance footage. Investigators recovered the firearm believed to have been used in the shooting along Herman’s path of flight. Ballistics testing confirmed it was the murder weapon, and DNA evidence tied the gun to Herman.
At sentencing, Assistant State’s Attorney Brooke Hinman presented additional evidence of Herman’s pattern of violence, including his alleged involvement in two other shootings, disruptive and sexual misconduct while in jail, and testimony related to the 2023 killing of Jalen Williams — a case in which Herman was previously acquitted, but which prosecutors still linked to him during sentencing.
Hinman also read from records detailing Herman’s troubled past, including a statement from a juvenile probation officer describing him as “completely out of control” and unwilling to follow any rules or laws.
Despite the prosecution’s request for a natural life sentence, Judge Rosenbaum imposed the maximum sentence available under the law short of life without parole.