Posts Tagged ‘gun’

Louisiana Man Killed After Pointing Gun at Officer

April 12, 2009

 The Associated Press reported that Bernard Monroe, a 73 year old black man that was a retired power company lineman was killed on February 9, 2009 outside of his home during a family barbecue after he pointed a gun at a Homer, Louisiana Police Officer.

 Officer Tim Cox and another officer, that the Homer Police Dept. has refused to identify, were chasing  Monroe’s son, Shaun Monroe, 38, who has an arrest record for assault & battery, but no current outstanding warrants, for his alleged involvement in a drug deal that took place just a few blocks from the home of the Elder Monroe when they saw him run into his father’s house. However, Monroe’s family at the cook-out said he was sitting in a truck talking to his sister when the officers arrived at the home.

 The officers followed the suspect into the house and a few minutes later Shaun Monroe emerged from the home with the unidentified officer in pursuit. When the officer caught up to Monroe he tasered him in the front yard prompting the elder Monroe to confront the officer.

 As Monroe, with pistol in hand, advanced toward the officer in the front yard, Officer Cox, who was still in the house, fired a shot through the home’s screen door striking Monroe killing him.

 Both officers said that Monroe was shot only after he pointed a pistol at the officer in the yard, but witnesses said Monroe was holding only a bottle of water when he was shot. Marcus Frazier, a 32 year old neighbor of Monroe, said he saw one of the officers pick up a gun from a chair on the porch and place it near Monroe’s body. Frazier also said that the elder Monroe kept a gun close by at all times due to drug activity near his home.

 Shaun Monroe, despite being chased and tasered, was not charged with any wrongdoing.

 Homer Police Chief Russell Mills, whom blacks have accused of directing police harassment at them, declined to be interviewed about the incident and has hired an attorney saying he fears for his job.

 Bernard Monroe was married to his wife for more than 50 years and raised 5 children with her.

Cop murder spotlights crisis of killer aliens

February 19, 2009

Posted: September 28, 2006
9:18 pm Eastern

© 2009 WorldNetDaily.com

INVASION USA
No government agency tracks crimes by illegals, not even attacks on police

 


Officer Rodney Johnson

WASHINGTON – Charged with molesting a 12-year-old girl, Juan Leonardo Qunitero had been deported back to Mexico in 1999 as an illegal alien. Nevertheless, last week, he was back in the U.S., living comfortably in a city that prohibited police from asking anyone about their immigration status.

Rodney Johnson was a 12-year veteran on the Houston police force. Married with five children, he was big, kind-hearted and unafraid of working the toughest gang beats or late-night shifts.

On Thursday, Sept. 21, around 5:30 p.m., he pulled over a white Ford pickup driving 50 mph in a 30 mph zone in what should have been a routine traffic stop. The driver, Quintero, had neither a driver’s license nor any other identification so, after a pat down, Johnson handcuffed him and placed him in the back of his patrol car. But Johnson missed the gun in Quintero’s waistband. The prisoner pulled it out and fired four times at Johnson at close range.

When Johnson was laid to rest this week after his execution-style murder he joined a growing list of law enforcers gunned down by foreign criminals. Meanwhile, in Florida, a sheriff’s deputy was killed and another shot in the leg yesterday after they pursued a motorist who ran away from a traffic stop.

Deputy Vernon Matthew “Matt” Williams and his K-9 unit were shot dead, officials said. Deputy Doug Speirs was shot in the leg but was expected to recover. Polk County sheriff’s deputies early today said they shot and killed a suspect, described as a black man with a Jamaican accent with dreadlocks.

Though no government agency in the U.S. – not the FBI nor Immigration and Customs Enforcement – tracks violent crimes by illegal aliens, even murders of police officers, a search by WND of news reports in the last three years shows law enforcement personnel are hardly immune to deadly carnage wrought by untracked, undocumented armed predators inside the country.

Less than a year ago, Nov. 12, 2005, Dallas police officer Brian Jackson met the same fate.

It seems Juan Lizcano, an illegal alien who worked as a gardener, had a few too many drinks that Saturday evening before heading to the home of Marta Cruz, according to a witness who accompanied him.

Again, police responded early Sunday morning to a domestic disturbance call at Cruz’s home and were told that Lizcano had threatened his ex-girlfriend and fired a handgun inside the house. He was gone by the time officers arrived.

About 45 minutes later, officers were notified that Lizcano had returned to the home. Officers pursued him on foot as the suspect jumped over fences and ran through yards.

Officer Jackson died of a wound to his right underarm, near his protective vest, suffered in a gunfight with Lizcano. He and his wife, JoAnn, a respiratory therapist, had been married less than four months.

In Denver, Raul Gomez-Garcia, another illegal alien charged with shooting two police officers at a crowded party where both the gunmen’s wife and 2-year-old daughter were seated, was convicted last week.

Gomez-Garcia, 21, faced trial in Denver District Court for second-degree murder of Denver police officer Donald “Donnie” Young and attempted first-degree murder of Detective Jack Bishop. The two officers were shot in the back May 8, 2005, as they worked security at an invitation-only baptismal party.

The officers had turned Gomez-Garcia away from the party. He returned later, intent on shooting the two officers.

Gomez-Garcia has almost no education, is illiterate and explained to investigators that he had carried a loaded gun since he was 13 years old. He came to the United States when he was 8 and lived in south central Los Angeles.

Perhaps one of the most dramatic stories of a police officer being shot by an illegal alien is the case of shooting Arizona sheriff’s deputy Sean Pearce, an 11-year veteran of the force who served a search warrant Dec. 16, 2004, at a Mesa trailer home.

Hiding behind a Christmas tree inside was Jorge Luis Guerra Vargas, a 22-year-old illegal alien who opened fire on Pearce.

Ironically, at the time of the shooting, Pearce’s father, Russell, an Arizona legislator, was in Washington giving a speech about illegal immigration at the Brookings Institution when he got the message to call home. His wife, he knew, “wouldn’t be calling if it wasn’t important. It had to do with the children.” Pearce excused himself from the podium and found a phone to hear the tragic news.

A WND investigation of local news reports found dozens more cases of police officers slain by illegal aliens. They include:


Deputy Brandon Winfield

 

  • Deputy Brandon “Brandy” Winfield, 29, of the Marion County, Ohio, sheriff’s department, was murdered Oct. 17, 2004. Winfield was on routine patrol when he stopped to assist what he thought was a stranded motorist. Winfield later was found shot in the head in his vehicle, which had hit a guard rail and flipped into a ravine. Both of those charges in the crime were illegal aliens. 
  • Detective Hugo Arango, 24, of the Doroville, Ga., police department, was murdered May 13, 2000. Arango was shot and killed after having been flagged down by a club patron who indicated that some men had been breaking into cars outside of a nightclub. Detective Arango located three suspects and detained them. As he searched for weapons, Bautista Ramirez, an illegal alien from Mexico, shot Arango four times. The first shot took off one of his fingers, the second went through his thigh. As Arango lay on the ground helpless, Ramirez intentionally fired one round through Arango’s badge, and then executed him with a shot to his head that severed his brain stem. 
  • National Park Service ranger Kristopher “Kriss” Eggle, 28, was murdered Aug. 9, 2002. Ranger Eggle was shot and killed in the line of duty at Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument while pursuing members of a drug cartel hit squad which fled into the U.S. after committing a string of murders in Mexico.

    Deputy Saul Gallegos

     

  • Deputy Saul Gallegos, 35, of the Chelan County, Wash., sheriff’s department was murdered June 26, 2003. Gallegos was shot and killed after stopping a vehicle in a routine traffic stop. Jose Sanchez-Guillen, 22, who had been deported three times to Mexico, was found guilty of aggravated first-degree murder.

    Deputy Sheriff David March

     

  • Deputy Sheriff David March, 33, of the Los Angeles County sheriff’s department, was murdered April 29, 2002. March was on routine patrol when he made a traffic stop. The driver, Armando Garcia, shot March in the chest and the head – execution style. Garcia had been deported three times, had a long history of drug charges, violent crimes and weapons charges. The illegal alien from Mexico was already wanted for two attempted murders. 
  • Officer Tony Zeppetella, 27, of the Oceanside, Calif., police department, was murdered June 13, 2003. Zeppetella stopped Adrien George Camacho for a traffic violation. Camacho pulled out a gun and shot the officer. Camacho then pistol-whipped the injured officer before shooting him again, killing him with the officer’s own gun. Camacho is an illegal alien and gang member from Mexico with a criminal history that includes five previous felony convictions and several deportations. 
  • A Huntsville, Ala., police officer, Daniel Howard Golden, 27, was shot multiple times by Benito Albarran, 31, an illegal immigrant in August 2005.

While no government agencies specifically track crimes by illegal aliens, there have been some efforts to quantify the loss. Last December, Mac Johnson set out to investigate the number of homicides perpetrated by illegal aliens. Since the federal government would not provide any useful information, he contacted all 50 statehouses. Three months later, he had fewer than a dozen responses. Only one state, Vermont, provided any useful information.

He then set out to statistically estimate the number of murders by illegal aliens based on available crime data and conservative estimates of the actually number of illegal aliens in the country – which, of course, nobody really knows.

He found that between 1,806 and 2,510 people in the U.S. are murdered annually by illegal aliens. If he’s right, that would represent between 11 percent and 15 percent of all murders in the U.S.

In one study of a sample 55,000 illegal immigrants serving prison sentences in the U.S., it was discovered that they are responsible for over 400,000 arrests and over 700,000 felony crimes.

According to Heather McDonald of the Manhattan Institute, 95 percent of all outstanding warrants for homicide (which total 1,200 to 1,500) target illegal aliens. Up to two-thirds of all fugitive felony warrants (17,000) are for illegal aliens.

Court Reinstates Washington Murder Conviction

January 28, 2009

The Associated Press, Wednesday January 21, 2009

WASHINGTON – The Supreme Court has reinstated the murder conviction of the driver in a gang-related, drive-by shooting that horrified Seattle in 1994.

By a 6-3 vote, the court on Wednesday reversed a federal appeals court that had thrown out the second-degree murder conviction of Cesar Sarausad II.

The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco overturned the conviction because of unclear jury instructions. But the high court, in a majority opinion written by Justice Clarence Thomas, said there was “no evidence of ultimate juror confusion.”

“Rather, the jury simply reached a unanimous decision that the state had proved Sarausad’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt,” Thomas wrote.

In a dissenting opinion, Justice David Souter said an uncertain instruction from the trial judge merged with a “confounding prosecutorial argument” that included a “clearly erroneous statement of law.”

“In these circumstances, jury confusion is all but inevitable and jury error the reasonable likelihood,” wrote Souter, who was joined in his opinion by Justices John Paul Stevens and Ruth Bader Ginsburg.

Sarausad was convicted for his role as the driver in the shooting that killed a teenage girl outside a Seattle high school.

Sarausad was a 19-year-old freshman at the University of Washington at the time of the shooting. He drove the car from which Brian Ronquillo shot and killed 16-year-old Melissa Fernandes. She had nothing to do with the gang rivalry that led to the shooting.

Ronquillo was convicted of first-degree murder and sentenced to 52 years in prison. Sarausad got a 27-year sentence.

Sarausad admitted being the driver but denied knowing that Ronquillo had a gun, much less that he was planning to kill anyone.

The jury instructions at issue concerned whether, to be convicted of second-degree murder, Sarausad had to know that Ronquillo intended to use a gun and that someone could die as a result.

The case is Waddington v. Sarausad, 07-772.

 

US Supreme Court Holds That Non-Suspect Passengers Can Be Frisked

January 28, 2009

Associated Press, January 26, 2009

WASHINGTON – The Supreme Court ruled Monday that police officers have leeway to frisk a passenger in a car stopped for a traffic violation even if nothing indicates the passenger has committed a crime or is about to do so.

The court on Monday unanimously overruled an Arizona appeals court that threw out evidence found during such an encounter.

The case involved a 2002 pat-down search of an Eloy, Ariz., man by an Oro Valley police officer, who found a gun and marijuana.

The justices accepted Arizona’s argument that traffic stops are inherently dangerous for police and that pat-downs are permissible when an officer has a reasonable suspicion that the passenger may be armed and dangerous.

The pat-down is allowed if the police “harbor reasonable suspicion that a person subjected to the frisk is armed, and therefore dangerous to the safety of the police and public,” Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg said.

The case is Arizona v. Johnson, 07-1122.

 

Dallas, NC Police Shoot, Kill Man Who tried to Grab Officer’s Gun

January 27, 2009

January 24, 2009 – 4:12 PM
Corey Friedman
DALLAS — Chris Brown heard the gunshots. Then, he saw his uncle lying facedown in the grass.

“By the time we got outside, he was on his belly,” Brown said. “There was a cop sitting on his back-Dallas Police. He was not moving. I automatically knew he was gone.”

Police shot and killed 44-year-old Terrance Kennedy around 12:30 a.m. Saturday in the front yard outside 518 E. Peachtree St. Kennedy allegedly tried to grab an officer’s gun, but relatives and neighbors say he had run from the police and was shot in the back.

“My understanding is he was attempting to take one of the officers’ sidearms,” said Police Chief Gary Buckner.

Officer R.R. Flick and Sgt. J.C. Propst were involved in the shooting. The chief said Kennedy reached for Flick’s gun, but he wouldn’t say which officer fired at Kennedy or whether both shot at him.

The N.C. State Bureau of Investigation is probing the incident and will determine if the shooting was justified. Buckner said the Dallas Police Department is conducting a parallel internal investigation.

“We’re definitely going to get to the bottom of it and find out what happened and exactly what took place,” Buckner said.

Kennedy’s sister, Sondra Brown-Thompson, said he was sitting on the porch of her home, 520 E. Peachtree St., when police arrived. Officers were trying to serve an arrest warrant on Kennedy.

Relatives said Kennedy ran from the officers and was shocked with a Taser stun gun and blasted with pepper spray. They say he didn’t reach for a gun and believe the shooting was unnecessary.

“They could have tased him once, maybe tased him twice and put handcuffs on him,” Brown-Thompson said. “They didn’t have to shoot him.”

Buckner said he couldn’t discuss whether the Taser and pepper spray were used due to the SBI and internal investigations.

Dallas Police said in a news release that Kennedy was shot once and died at Gaston Memorial Hospital.

Flick and Propst were placed on administrative leave, a customary procedure when police officers are involved in a shooting. Flick has worked for the department since February 2006 and Propst was hired in June 2006.

Kennedy, who was also known as Tiny Brown, grew up in a large family with four brothers and four sisters. One sister, Kenyada Kennedy, runs a neighborhood grocery store at 211 S. Davis St.

“Terrance was a good boy,” she said. “He loved his nieces and nephews. He helped the neighborhood. He was a great guy, he was a brother to us, he was a loved one.”

John Paul Kennedy said his brother, Terrance, worked for him at his remodeling business and had also worked for a roofing company.

Terrance Kennedy has an extensive criminal record and was sentenced to a combined 32 years in prison. Most recently, he was released in July 2007 after serving almost 12 years on convictions for possession and sale of a Schedule II controlled substance.

A deputy in the Gaston County Sheriff’s Office warrant repository said Kennedy had a Dec. 21 arrest warrant for a charge of assault on a female.

With a tear-streaked face, Brown-Thompson walked back and forth in her gravel driveway Saturday afternoon, shouting that Kennedy didn’t deserve to die.

You can reach Corey Friedman at 704-869-1828.

BEHIND BARS
Terrance Kennedy, who was shot and killed early Saturday morning after allegedly reaching for a police officer’s gun, has an extensive criminal history and has served five prison sentences, according to the N.C. Department of Correction. His convictions and prison terms are listed below.

Sentence began: Aug. 31, 1995
Released: July 13, 2007
Convictions: Possession with intent to sell Schedule II controlled substance (three counts), sell Schedule II controlled substance (three counts)

Sentence began: Jan. 6, 1987
Released: Aug. 13, 1993
Convictions: Assault with a deadly weapon inflicting serious injury (two counts), common-law robbery

Sentence began: Jan. 19, 1984
Released: Nov. 4, 1985
Convictions: Felony breaking and entering, common-law robbery, assault on a female

Sentence began: Feb. 2, 1982
Released: Dec. 13, 1982
Convictions: Breaking /entering and larceny, larceny – more more than $200

Sentence began: Dec. 9, 1980
Released: Feb. 22, 1982
Convictions: Misdemeanor breaking and entering (two counts), larceny – more more than $200 (two counts)


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