More lipstick on what turns out to be an even uglier pig.
My thanks to Jackie J. for forwarding these. My apologies for taking so long to get them posted. They provide certain small but revealing details about the woman, the motivation and the crime.
Mike
III
http://www.heraldnet.com/article/20090624/NEWS01/706249604&news01ad=1#Everett.woman.was.suspect.just.hours.after.Arizona.slaying
Wednesday, June 24, 2009
Everett woman was suspect just hours after Arizona slaying
By Scott North and Jackson Holtz
Border-watch activist Shawna Forde of Everett surfaced as a potential suspect in an Arizona double-murder investigation within hours of the killings after a co-defendant told detectives she'd been staying at his home nearby, according to police reports.
The Pima County Sheriff's Department today released roughly 200 pages of case reports to The Green Valley News and Sun newspaper in southern Arizona. The records focus primarily on the investigation in the hours immediately after the May 30 killings.
News apparently was swirling through the small town of Arivaca, Ariz., about the home-invasion robbery that took the lives of Raul Flores, 29, his daughter, Brisenia, 9, and left the girl's mother with gunshot wounds.
Talk in town quickly brought detectives to the home of Albert Robert Gaxiola, 42, who was said to have had bad blood with Flores, in part because of alleged drug trafficking.
Gaxiola told investigators he didn't know anything about the shootings and had been in Tucson, the police reports said.
"Upon being questioned about other individuals that were present at his house, he stated that a group of people whom he identified as 'Minute men' had been staying there," the report said. "He stated that he had a relationship with the leader whom he identified as Shawna Forde."
Gaxiola reportedly told detectives that the military-style clothing and gear in his house, plus a blood-stained van that was at his home all were associated with Forde, 41.
Detectives took items from Gaxiola's home under a search warrant, including an improvised grenade and numerous firearms, including a shotgun found in a hidden compartment, documents show. They also seized Gaxiola's cell phone.
"I opened the cell phone and questioned him about contacts whom he had listed in the phone; one of which was identified as 'White,' " one officer wrote. Gaxiola "stated that White was the nickname of Shawna Forde. I then asked him why that was her nickname. He stated that she hates all ethnicity with the exception of Caucasians."
The phone appeared to contain numerous text messages between Forde and Gaxiola during the night of the fatal robbery, the police reports said.
The documents released today say little about what happened with the investigation between June 1 and June 12, when Forde and Gaxiola were arrested. There also is no mention of Jason Eugene Bush, 34, who also is charged in the case.
The records contain a summary of the interview detectives did with Flores' wife after she reached the hospital.
She said Raul Flores had told her that law officers were at the door, demanding entry to search for fugitives.
She said that two people entered the home, both wearing camouflage clothing. One was a large man; the other a short, "heavyset or chubby" woman, both white, the documents said.
The shooting victim "stated that the female appeared to be giving orders to the male and was talking on a walkie-talkie or similar device to other individuals," perhaps outside the home.
The tall man shot her husband, shot her, and shot their daughter, she told police.
The woman said she heard more people come into the home, perhaps speaking Spanish. They left, and the woman managed to get her husband's pistol in the kitchen and call 911.
The large man returned to the house and a gun battle erupted. The woman said a Hispanic man stuck his head in the door at one point and hollered something.
The woman told police that she thought the Hispanic intruder could be Gaxiola, although she wasn't certain. She also described a teal-colored minivan, similar to the one found at Gaxiola's home, the reports said. The woman said she remembered it because it had cruised through her neighborhood days before. The man and woman inside the van waved at her, reports said.
The intruders left behind a sawed-off shotgun in the house. A trail of blood led to a handgun that was found outside.
The robbers apparently left without finding the $4,000 cash hidden in the house.
Pima County officials have alleged the purpose of the robbery was to get money and drugs to fund Forde's group.
Forde was arrested in Sierra Vista, Ariz., nearly two weeks after the shootings. Investigators believe she and Bush went to northern California, where they are suspected in a home-invasion robbery and burglary.
One of the documents talks about Forde's demeanor while being fingerprinted after her arrest. She reportedly refused to sign the fingerprint card.
When she was searched, a white piece of paper was found in one of her pants pockets. It appeared to contain GPS coordinates, the documents said.
Forde reportedly said that the paper contained information about a drug cartel in Mexico.
A Pima County grand jury returned indictments late Monday against Forde, Bush and Gaxiola.
Pima County Deputy Attorney Rick Unklesbay said Tuesday each defendant is charged with two counts of first-degree murder, two counts of aggravated assault and one count of attempted first-degree murder, first-degree burglary, armed robbery and aggravated robbery.
They are scheduled to be arraigned Monday.
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http://www.komonews.com/news/local/49046871.html
Report: Minutemen leader was involved with accused accomplice
Jun 24, 2009 at 5:58 PM PDT
By ARTHUR H. ROTSTEIN
TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) - Authorities released new details Wednesday about an Arizona home invasion that left a little girl and her father dead, with investigators saying a 12-gauge shotgun was found in a concealed compartment of a suspect's printer and he harbored members of an anti-illegal immigration group.
Albert Robert Gaxiola, 42, told Pima County Sheriff's investigators that he let members of the Minutemen American Defense group stay at his house and he had a relationship with 41-year-old Shawna Forde, the leader of the border watch group accused of planning the attack to help fund her anti-immigrant operations.
Reports released Wednesday show investigators searched Gaxiola's house in Arivaca two days after the May 30 home invasion and found military-style gear and clothing. The report also said that a printer in Gaxiola's home had a concealed compartment in which a 12-gauge shotgun was found, with a spent shell in the chamber and seven more shells in the magazine.
"I observed numerous firearms, camouflage clothing and other military type gear being found," the detective said.
The robbery in the small community of Arivaca left 29-year-old Raul Junior Flores and his 9-year-old daughter, Brisenia, dead. Gina Gonzalez, the girl's mother and Flores' wife, was wounded.
Authorities arrested Gaxiola of Arivaca; Forde, of Everett, Wash., and Jason Eugene Bush, 34, of Meadview, Ariz., near the New Mexico border, in connection with the shooting.
Bush was arrested at a Kingman, Ariz., hospital undergoing treatment for a leg wound. The three were indicted this week by a county grand jury on charges including first-degree murder, aggravated assault and aggravated robbery.
After the shootings, Pima County Sheriff Clarence Dupnik described Flores as a suspected drug dealer.
Detectives began focusing on Gaxiola a day after the shootings and after a hospital interview with Gonzalez.
Gonzalez, 31, was shot three times and she shot and wounded Bush during the home invasion, authorities said.
She gave detectives information that helped tie Gaxiola to the shootings, according to the report.
She told Detective R.M. Svec that a man "who stuck his head into the residence did match the approximate height and weight of Albert. When she heard the man yell, she said, he sounded like Gaxiola.
She knew Gaxiola from living in Arivaca, she said, and he and her husband had a dispute last year because Gaxiola had allegedly stored marijuana on their property.
According to another incident report from Svec, Gaxiola told detectives a few hours after Gonzalez's interview that he had heard about the fatal shootings and the wounding of Gonzalez "but he had absolutely no knowledge of any participation in the incident." Gaxiola said he was in Tucson on May 30, according to the report.
Gaxiola told detectives that clothing and military-type webbing gear in a container in his home belonged to "a group of people whom he identified as Minute Men." The people had been staying in his home, he said.
Gaxiola denied owning any weapons, according to the report, and he told investigators that any weapons found in his home belonged to Forde's group.
A van Gonzalez described as suspicious and one she had seen drive past her home a few days before the attack also was parked in front of Gaxiola's home during the interview, Svec's report said. Gaxiola told authorities it belonged to the Minutemen group and Forde had driven it.
Gonzalez told detectives that the intruders wore camouflage clothing and told her and her family that they were law enforcement personnel looking for fugitives.
2 comments:
You seem to have trouble keeping the facts straight.
You call the survivor Gonzales, yet her name is Flores.
Don't you find it odd that Shawna hated all non-whites but she was sleeping with Gaxiola? If Gaxiola knew she didn't like his kind, why was he sleeping with her?
Anon. -- I'M not having trouble keeping my facts straight. If you're upset at the work product of the reporter(s), contact them.
Having met Shawna Forde, I have no trouble believing that she is both racist and manipulating enough to trade sex for compliance. I'm sure she was sleeping with both of them. She was not a chaste woman. Wouldn't surprise me if she doesn't mesmerize some male guard in the future to help her escape.
As for Gaxiola, have you ever known a criminal who wasn't willing to take something, especially if it was being given away? He was thinking, if he thought at all, with the wrong head.
Mike
III
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