A reputed Denver gang member, who was the victim in a high-profile 2013 shooting that left him paralyzed and in a wheelchair, is suspected in the death last year of his girlfriend’s 2-year-old daughter.

Hasan Isaiah Jones, 24, is being held at Denver’s downtown jail on a charge in Arapahoe County of child abuse resulting in death, a Class 2 felony, in the August killing of Ny’Ari Hines.

Ny’Ari died of a bowel bleed from blunt force injuries to her stomach, according to an arrest warrant filed last month by Aurora police. Authorities say she had alcohol in her system and a cigarette burn on her shoulder when emergency responders worked to resuscitate her Aug. 18 after her mother called 911.

In 2013, Jones was shot multiple times allegedly by anti-gang activist Terrance Roberts in Denver’s Park Hill neighborhood. Roberts says the shooting, which garnered national attention and police say was gang related, was in self-defense.

Roberts is awaiting trial in the case.

Separately, Jones was acquitted Thursday of six counts, including attempted murder, in Denver for his suspected involvement in a May 2014 drive-by shooting. He was arrested in that case after being interviewed by Aurora police in Ny’Ari’s death.

Ny’Ari’s mother, Quisa Antoine, told Aurora police she left the toddler in Jones’ care all day and that when she returned Ny’Ari was complaining of stomach pain and was having trouble breathing.

Thinking the child was constipated, Antoine told investigators she went to buy prune juice, the warrant says. Antoine heard Jones yelling for her as she returned and found Ny’Ari in Jones’ lap “with her head tipped back” and not breathing, the warrant says.

Jones, over several interviews with investigators, denied all involvement in the death.

He said that some scratches on the Ny’Ari’s hands were from him “accidentally bumping into her with his wheelchair,” the warrant says. Antoine told police Jones had once, in another incident, rolled his wheelchair over Ny’Ari’s ankle, saying it too was an “accident,” according to the warrant.

The court document also says Antoine noticed “black spots on Ny’Ari’s stomach” the day she died.

Efforts to reach Antoine were unsuccessful.

The Arapahoe County Coroner’s Office said Thursday an autopsy report for Ny’Ari could not be released.

The arrest warrant shows, however, the office ruled the toddler’s manner of death homicide and found “extensive bruising” on her head, torso and extremities.

Aurora police declined to comment on the case, saying it is in the hands of Arapahoe County prosecutors.

Prosecutors declined to comment as well, saying the investigation into the case remains active and ongoing. Michelle Yi, a spokeswoman for the 18th Judicial District Attorney’s Office, said a formal hearing in the case has yet to be set.