News (Media Awareness Project) - US AZ: Complex Drug Probe Triggered SWAT Raid |
Title: | US AZ: Complex Drug Probe Triggered SWAT Raid |
Published On: | 2011-05-27 |
Source: | Arizona Daily Star (Tucson, AZ) |
Fetched On: | 2011-05-30 06:00:37 |
COMPLEX DRUG PROBE TRIGGERED SWAT RAID
The man shot and killed by SWAT officers, as well as his brother and
another man, were listed as suspects in a complex drug investigation
being conducted by the Sheriff's Department, according to documents
released Thursday.
That investigation was the reason heavily armed SWAT officers went to
Jose Guerena's house to serve a search warrant that ended in his
fatal shooting May 5, reports show.
More than 500 pages of officers' statements, evidence lists and
witness interviews were released by the Pima County Sheriff's
Department. Also released were audiotapes from the shooting scene,
radio transmissions and other communications made by law enforcement
personnel during the serving of search warrants on four homes on the
southwest side.
A short video showing Pima County Regional SWAT team members serving
the warrant was also released. The written documents detail what
sheriff's personnel did during the incident.
The short video recording shows that deputies approaching Jose
Guerena's home turned the sirens on for a few seconds as they
approached. It also shows them announcing themselves, then knocking
down the front door and firing their guns.
Audiotapes reveal that no SWAT officers entered Guerena's house. Law
enforcement officers went into his home only after a robot was sent
in and it was determined about an hour after the shooting that
Guerena, a former Marine, was dead.
The reports state Jose Guerena; his brother, Alejandro; and Jose
Celaya were named as suspects in briefings given to officers before
the search warrants were served. Many of the officers' reports refer
to the sheriff's long-term drug investigation as the reason for the
search warrants.
Reports show about $100,000 in cash, marijuana and firearms were
seized that morning from the four homes that were searched.
Items found in Jose Guerena's house included: a Colt .38-caliber
handgun, paperwork, tax returns, insurance papers, bank statements
and a bank card, reports showed.
Another report said detectives found body armor in a hallway closet
and a U.S. Border Patrol hat in the garage.
Some search warrant documents remained sealed and were not released Thursday.
Dramatic video
In the video released by the Sheriff's Department, about five SWAT
team members are seen jumping out of the vehicle with shields,
helmets and bulletproof vests, all marked "POLICE" across the front
and back. The sirens stop and the officers begin shouting "Police,
search warrant, open the door," alternating with the same command in
Spanish three times before they break down the front door of Guerena's house.
A couple of seconds after the door is opened, one officers says, "Hit
him," and all the officers begin shooting from the doorway.
One of the officers falls down a couple of seconds after they open
fire, and then all SWAT team members back away from the door, the video shows.
The Sheriff's Department said previously that Guerena pointed an
AR-15 rifle at officers as they entered the home. It was determined
that Guerena did not fire at officers.
At 9:34 a.m., the audiotapes reveal that SWAT officers began what
would be about 30 minutes of repeating in English and Spanish: "It's
the Pima County Sheriff's Department SWAT team. Anyone inside the
house, come out with your hands up, no weapons in your hands."
Michael Storie, an attorney representing the five SWAT officers who
shot at Guerena, said last week that all those officers were
separated immediately after the shooting so they could be interviewed
and provide objective statements of what happened. The audiotapes
reveal that after about 45 minutes, all the SWAT officers are
together. They can be heard talking about what happened, according to
tape recordings made at the scene.
"That was um, like a movie, the way he jumped out," said the SWAT team leader.
"Well, he waited, he waited and once Hector came up ..." said another
SWAT member just before being interrupted by the SWAT leader who
said, "What did he say?" Hector is the name of one of the SWAT officers.
Two other voices say they "couldn't hear anything" and that they
didn't know if Jose Guerena said anything before the shooting began.
"He yelled something, 'I got something for you' or something," the
SWAT leader told them, according to the audiotapes.
The Sheriff's Department said previously that Guerena said something
as he pointed his gun at officers.
"I just started boom, boom, boom, boom," said another voice on the tape.
"Yeah, we were all out of ammo when we got back," the SWAT leader said.
While this conversation is going on outside, the robot was sent into
the house to check on Jose Guerena, who was shot at least 60 times.
A SWAT deputy directed the robot into the home and observed Guerena
lying face down in the kitchen area.
The deputy operating the robot used its arm to apply pressure to
Guerena to see if he would respond.
He then used the robot to push down on Guerena's lower and middle
back several times but received no response.
While outside, a SWAT member asked the team leader if they were going
inside the house. The team leader can be heard on the tape saying no,
and the team member said, "Why not? ... Might as well finish what I started."
The deputy operating the robot did not see Guerena's chest rising or
falling, as if he were breathing, and said he was "Code 900" or dead,
about 50 minutes into the audiotape.
One officer wrote in a report that in a briefing before the incident
he was told there was an ongoing narcotics investigation and that
suspects may be linked to a double homicide.
Other officers were briefed about a double slaying in Tucson in which
a man and his wife were killed during a home invasion that was
witnessed by the couple's young daughter.
According to a report, a detective interviewing Jose Guerena's
younger brother, Jesus Gerardo Guerena, asked him about the slayings
of Manuel and Cynthia Orozco. Jesus Guerena said he knew the couple
because they were related to his brother Alejandro's wife.
According to Star archives, Manuel and Cynthia Orozco were killed
during a home invasion in March 2010.
A second home
A second SWAT team served a search warrant at a nearby house in the
6200 block of Oklahoma Street at the same time as the shooting. Later
that morning officers also served a warrant at two other houses all
related to the same investigation, the reports show.
Detective John Mawhinney wrote in his report that he conducted a
search of the residence in the 6200 block of West Oklahoma Street in
connection with this case and found a large shoebox full of cash under a bed.
A later tally showed the box contained nearly $94,000. He also found
a bag of marijuana in the stove and ammunition, his report stated.
Inside the home on Oklahoma, a report states, an AK-47 rifle was
found. Guns and ballistic vests were found at several of the
residences, the reports show.
Seven vehicles were also found at the house on Oklahoma. Several
reports indicated drug dogs used in searches at the house alerted
officers to the smell of narcotics on most of the vehicles there.
While investigators were searching the Oklahoma residence, a pickup
truck pulled up to the house. A report states that Alejandro Guerena
was driving the truck. He was detained.
The report states Alejandro Guerena told investigators there was a
"pistola" in the truck. Detectives recovered a .45-caliber handgun
from the vehicle.
WIFE INTERVIEWED
Also released were statements made after the shooting by Vanessa
Guerena, Jose Guerena's wife.
She and the couple's young son were in the home at the time of the shooting.
She described having to talk to her 4-year-old son about his father
after he asked what had happened to his dad. She told him he had been
shot but would be OK.
"All I want to know, if he's alive," she told a detective.
The detective replied: "I'm sorry, he died."
"No! What were you guys thinking?" she said.
The detective told her the team was serving a search warrant and
"never intended on shooting him. That was not the intention."
Vanessa Guerena said her husband was left alone for a long time after
the shooting.
She said her son told her, "Mommy, I saw my daddy on the floor, with
all this blood. What happened? Is he gonna be OK?' "
The Sheriff's Department would not comment on the reports and tapes.
The man shot and killed by SWAT officers, as well as his brother and
another man, were listed as suspects in a complex drug investigation
being conducted by the Sheriff's Department, according to documents
released Thursday.
That investigation was the reason heavily armed SWAT officers went to
Jose Guerena's house to serve a search warrant that ended in his
fatal shooting May 5, reports show.
More than 500 pages of officers' statements, evidence lists and
witness interviews were released by the Pima County Sheriff's
Department. Also released were audiotapes from the shooting scene,
radio transmissions and other communications made by law enforcement
personnel during the serving of search warrants on four homes on the
southwest side.
A short video showing Pima County Regional SWAT team members serving
the warrant was also released. The written documents detail what
sheriff's personnel did during the incident.
The short video recording shows that deputies approaching Jose
Guerena's home turned the sirens on for a few seconds as they
approached. It also shows them announcing themselves, then knocking
down the front door and firing their guns.
Audiotapes reveal that no SWAT officers entered Guerena's house. Law
enforcement officers went into his home only after a robot was sent
in and it was determined about an hour after the shooting that
Guerena, a former Marine, was dead.
The reports state Jose Guerena; his brother, Alejandro; and Jose
Celaya were named as suspects in briefings given to officers before
the search warrants were served. Many of the officers' reports refer
to the sheriff's long-term drug investigation as the reason for the
search warrants.
Reports show about $100,000 in cash, marijuana and firearms were
seized that morning from the four homes that were searched.
Items found in Jose Guerena's house included: a Colt .38-caliber
handgun, paperwork, tax returns, insurance papers, bank statements
and a bank card, reports showed.
Another report said detectives found body armor in a hallway closet
and a U.S. Border Patrol hat in the garage.
Some search warrant documents remained sealed and were not released Thursday.
Dramatic video
In the video released by the Sheriff's Department, about five SWAT
team members are seen jumping out of the vehicle with shields,
helmets and bulletproof vests, all marked "POLICE" across the front
and back. The sirens stop and the officers begin shouting "Police,
search warrant, open the door," alternating with the same command in
Spanish three times before they break down the front door of Guerena's house.
A couple of seconds after the door is opened, one officers says, "Hit
him," and all the officers begin shooting from the doorway.
One of the officers falls down a couple of seconds after they open
fire, and then all SWAT team members back away from the door, the video shows.
The Sheriff's Department said previously that Guerena pointed an
AR-15 rifle at officers as they entered the home. It was determined
that Guerena did not fire at officers.
At 9:34 a.m., the audiotapes reveal that SWAT officers began what
would be about 30 minutes of repeating in English and Spanish: "It's
the Pima County Sheriff's Department SWAT team. Anyone inside the
house, come out with your hands up, no weapons in your hands."
Michael Storie, an attorney representing the five SWAT officers who
shot at Guerena, said last week that all those officers were
separated immediately after the shooting so they could be interviewed
and provide objective statements of what happened. The audiotapes
reveal that after about 45 minutes, all the SWAT officers are
together. They can be heard talking about what happened, according to
tape recordings made at the scene.
"That was um, like a movie, the way he jumped out," said the SWAT team leader.
"Well, he waited, he waited and once Hector came up ..." said another
SWAT member just before being interrupted by the SWAT leader who
said, "What did he say?" Hector is the name of one of the SWAT officers.
Two other voices say they "couldn't hear anything" and that they
didn't know if Jose Guerena said anything before the shooting began.
"He yelled something, 'I got something for you' or something," the
SWAT leader told them, according to the audiotapes.
The Sheriff's Department said previously that Guerena said something
as he pointed his gun at officers.
"I just started boom, boom, boom, boom," said another voice on the tape.
"Yeah, we were all out of ammo when we got back," the SWAT leader said.
While this conversation is going on outside, the robot was sent into
the house to check on Jose Guerena, who was shot at least 60 times.
A SWAT deputy directed the robot into the home and observed Guerena
lying face down in the kitchen area.
The deputy operating the robot used its arm to apply pressure to
Guerena to see if he would respond.
He then used the robot to push down on Guerena's lower and middle
back several times but received no response.
While outside, a SWAT member asked the team leader if they were going
inside the house. The team leader can be heard on the tape saying no,
and the team member said, "Why not? ... Might as well finish what I started."
The deputy operating the robot did not see Guerena's chest rising or
falling, as if he were breathing, and said he was "Code 900" or dead,
about 50 minutes into the audiotape.
One officer wrote in a report that in a briefing before the incident
he was told there was an ongoing narcotics investigation and that
suspects may be linked to a double homicide.
Other officers were briefed about a double slaying in Tucson in which
a man and his wife were killed during a home invasion that was
witnessed by the couple's young daughter.
According to a report, a detective interviewing Jose Guerena's
younger brother, Jesus Gerardo Guerena, asked him about the slayings
of Manuel and Cynthia Orozco. Jesus Guerena said he knew the couple
because they were related to his brother Alejandro's wife.
According to Star archives, Manuel and Cynthia Orozco were killed
during a home invasion in March 2010.
A second home
A second SWAT team served a search warrant at a nearby house in the
6200 block of Oklahoma Street at the same time as the shooting. Later
that morning officers also served a warrant at two other houses all
related to the same investigation, the reports show.
Detective John Mawhinney wrote in his report that he conducted a
search of the residence in the 6200 block of West Oklahoma Street in
connection with this case and found a large shoebox full of cash under a bed.
A later tally showed the box contained nearly $94,000. He also found
a bag of marijuana in the stove and ammunition, his report stated.
Inside the home on Oklahoma, a report states, an AK-47 rifle was
found. Guns and ballistic vests were found at several of the
residences, the reports show.
Seven vehicles were also found at the house on Oklahoma. Several
reports indicated drug dogs used in searches at the house alerted
officers to the smell of narcotics on most of the vehicles there.
While investigators were searching the Oklahoma residence, a pickup
truck pulled up to the house. A report states that Alejandro Guerena
was driving the truck. He was detained.
The report states Alejandro Guerena told investigators there was a
"pistola" in the truck. Detectives recovered a .45-caliber handgun
from the vehicle.
WIFE INTERVIEWED
Also released were statements made after the shooting by Vanessa
Guerena, Jose Guerena's wife.
She and the couple's young son were in the home at the time of the shooting.
She described having to talk to her 4-year-old son about his father
after he asked what had happened to his dad. She told him he had been
shot but would be OK.
"All I want to know, if he's alive," she told a detective.
The detective replied: "I'm sorry, he died."
"No! What were you guys thinking?" she said.
The detective told her the team was serving a search warrant and
"never intended on shooting him. That was not the intention."
Vanessa Guerena said her husband was left alone for a long time after
the shooting.
She said her son told her, "Mommy, I saw my daddy on the floor, with
all this blood. What happened? Is he gonna be OK?' "
The Sheriff's Department would not comment on the reports and tapes.
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