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New Mexico cowboy road rage shot dead 4 yr old girl on highway quarrel

PAP_Junta

Alfrescian
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http://www.pressherald.com/2015/10/...querque-road-rage-killing-of-4-year-old-girl/


Man admits to road-rage killing of 4-year-old girl, Albuquerque police say
The girl was riding in the backseat of her father's truck when she was struck by gunfire from another car.
BY MARY HUDETZ AND BOB SEAVEYTHE ASSOCIATED PRESS
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FBI special agent in charge Carol Lee, left, and Albuquerque Police Department Chief Gorden Eden address the media about the shooting death of 4-year-old Lilly Garcia, who was shot in Albuquerque, N.M., Wednesday. Roberto E. Rosales/The Albuquerque Journal via AP
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. man confessed to fatally shooting a 4-year-old girl while arguing with her father as the two men drove down a freeway in separate vehicles, police said, without offering more details on what led to the apparent road-rage slaying.

Tony Torrez, 32, was arrested Wednesday and admitted shooting Lilly Garcia while she was riding in the backseat of her father’s pickup truck with her 7-year-old brother, police said. He has been charged with murder, assault, child abuse and other crimes.


The children’s father had picked them up from school Tuesday when someone in another vehicle opened fire on the family as they traveled on Interstate 40, Albuquerque’s main east-west freeway.

The father told authorities that he was trying to exit the freeway when a car forced him out of his lane, a police statement said.

“The two drivers exchanged words when Torrez pulled out a gun and shot at the red truck driven by Lilly’s father,” the statement continued. “Lilly was hit at least once in the head.”

The father pulled over and tried to give his daughter first aid as a bystander called 911.

The little girl’s grandfather said the attack left the family deep in mourning.

“They really have to do something about this. It’s a problem,” Jose Garcia said Thursday, referring to gun violence.

He spoke to The Associated Press in Spanish as he stood outside the family home, which is just south of the highway where the shooting occurred in a newly developed area of west Albuquerque near a park.

Television crews were also outside the home that appeared crowded with visitors seeking interviews with the mother and father.

After the shooting, a man alerted a dispatcher to a truck stopped on an I-40 median with “an adult holding an unresponsive child,” according to a roughly minute-long call released by police.

Two nurses showed up and tried to save the girl’s life before an ambulance rushed her to the hospital, where she died, Albuquerque Police Chief Gorden Eden said.

Authorities quickly began pressing the public for tips, offering about $25,000 for information leading to the arrest of the shooter, who was driving a newer-model maroon or dark red Toyota Corolla or Camry with a spoiler on the trunk and dark tinted windows. The car also had a University of New Mexico license plate.

With help from an anonymous caller and other tips from the community, detectives found Torrez, who “confessed to investigators he was responsible for the murder,” police said. He was being held on a $650,000 cash-only bond.

It was not clear exactly what led the incident to escalate, but the father told officers the shooting was the result of road rage.

The young girl’s death spawned an outpouring of sympathy nationwide. A GoFundMe account for funeral services and other expenses generated more than $64,000 since it was posted Tuesday. The hashtag #JusticeForLilly began showing up on social media.

Torrez has been tied to violent crimes in New Mexico dating back a decade, but all of those cases were dropped.

The only crime for which he’s been prosecuted was a misdemeanor speeding violation. He pleaded guilty to going 16 to 20 mph over the speed limit in April 2013, according to court records.

Around that time, charges including abandonment or abuse of a child and aggravated battery of a household member were dismissed after the victim died. Prosecutors also were not able to proceed with 2006 domestic violence charges.

At a news conference, the police chief released details of Torrez’s arrest and information about an unrelated shooting that evening that left an officer critically wounded. A man was later arrested in that case.

“For me, this is a terrible day,” Eden said.
 

PAP_Junta

Alfrescian
Loyal
Same town. Mata also got shot.




http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/police-arrest-made-shooting-albuquerque-officer-34644409



Albuquerque Officer Shot, Injured; Suspect Arrested
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — Oct 22, 2015, 4:03 PM ET
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An Albuquerque officer was shot repeatedly outside a pharmacy during a traffic stop, leaving the officer critically injured and launching a multi-agency manhunt before a suspect was arrested and later charged, officials said Thursday.

The eight-year veteran officer underwent surgery Wednesday night and was in critical but stable condition Thursday morning, officials said.


He is not out of the woods yet, Albuquerque police spokeswoman Celina Espinoza said in an email.

"He and his family are in need of many, many prayers," she wrote. The wounded officer's name was not immediately released.

Police and federal officials identified the suspect as Davon Lymon, 34, of Albuquerque.

Lymon has a lengthy criminal record, and a federal criminal complaint filed Thursday charged him with being a felon in illegal possession of a firearm, court records show. The complaint filed in U.S. District Court by a federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives officer cited Lymon's previous felony convictions in New Mexico state courts.

Lymon pleaded guilty to voluntary manslaughter and aggravated battery in 2002. He pleaded guilty to fraud and forgery the year before. Lymon also faced aggravated battery and kidnapping charges last year, but those cases were dismissed, online records show.


U.S. Attorney's Office spokesman Elizabeth Martinez said Lymon didn't yet have an attorney and that an initial court appearance hadn't yet been scheduled for him because he was getting medical treatment before being taken into federal custody.

The federal complaint said the officer was shot after he pulled over Lymon while Lymon was driving a motorcycle with a stolen license plate. Lymon pulled out a gun and fired it six times as the officer attempted to handcuff Lymon to the motorcycle, the complaint said.

The officer's wounds included one to the face near his chin, the complaint said.

It also said officers found a .40-caliber semi-automatic pistol in a vacant lot toward which Lymon ran after the shooting.

Police announced the arrest several hours after the shooting around 7:45 p.m. by a Walgreen's just south of Interstate 40.

After the shooting, contingents of officers spread out in eastern Albuquerque looking for the suspect.

The federal complaint said Lymon had a handcuff on his left wrist when he was found hiding in a shed and that he was hospitalized "for injuries sustained through the canine apprehension." The complaint didn't elaborate on the injuries, but it said Lymon was taken into custody by police SWAT officers using police dogs.

Albuquerque Police Chief Gorden Eden said the initial investigation showed that the officer was shot during a traffic stop. "For me, this is a terrible day. A terrible day," Eden said at a news conference.

He had urged residents in the area of the store to stay inside with doors and windows locked and to call 911 about anything suspicious.

Bernalillo County Sheriff's deputies and the state police assisted in the search, he said.

The shooting comes as New Mexico Attorney General Hector Balderas has launched a task force to examine how repeat offenders leave the state's criminal justice system quickly and commit more crimes. He launched the effort after authorities say another repeat offender shot and killed a Rio Rancho police officer earlier this year.
 
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