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Indybay Feature

Marine Killed After Shooting Cops

by Modesto Bee

Cop, Gunman Dead
Marine killed after shooting officers

Cop, Gunman Dead
Marine killed after shooting officers


A screen-grab from a surveillance video provided by the Stanislaus County Sheriff's Department shows the armed suspect during the shooting of two Ceres police officers Sunday night. (http://modestobee.com/local/story/9750300p-10616529c.html)



Deadly incident shocks Ceres residents

Raya's family, friends stunned by deadly act

A quiet Sunday night takes fatal turn

Transition from war to home is not easy

The Shootout, Minute By Minute

Officer Profiles

Law Enforcement Officers Killed In Line Of Duty

Video and still images of officer shooting




Officer Sam Ryno
Hospitalized with multiple gunshot wounds. He is expected to recover.

Sgt. Howard Stevenson
Police say Andres Raya gunned him down outside a Ceres liquor store.

Andres Raya



By PATRICK GIBLIN
BEE STAFF WRITER
Last Updated: January 11, 2005, 01:47:41 PM PST

CERES — It started as a seemingly simple and somewhat routine call Sunday night: a man was acting strangely at a liquor store.

Moments later, a burst of gunfire echoed through the normally quiet neighborhood. One Ceres police officer lay dying, another was critically wounded, and law enforcement was storming the scene by land and air.

Helicopters hovered above as police ordered people to go inside, lock their doors and turn off the lights.

Three hours later, another gun battle erupted, this one ending in the death of a 19-year-old Marine from Modesto,suspected of shooting the two officers.

Altogether, police and neighbors said Monday, dozens of bullets flew, shattering windows and piercing vehicles as residents hunkered down in terror.

"Brap-brap-brap-brap-brap," said Anthony John Phillips, a 15-year-old boy who lives a block away, trying to describe the rapid gunfire. "I was scared. It was crazy."

In the end:

# Ceres police Sgt. Howard Stevenson, 39, was dead.

# Andres Raya, who police say seemed determined to die rather than return to Iraq, was dead.

# Ceres police officer Sam Ryno, 50, was hospitalized with multiple gunshot wounds. He was in critical condition Monday, and is expected to recover.

Monday, detectives from sev-eral law enforcement agencies — from the Ceres police to the FBI — sifted through events leading to Sunday's carnage.

Officers were still struggling to figure out what drove Raya to fire on officers.

"It was premeditated, planned, an ambush," Ceres Police Chief Art de Werk said. "It was a suicide by cop."

De Werk said investigators are not ruling out other motives or accomplices, but believe that Raya, a Marine who had served seven months in Iraq, was concerned about the possibility of going back into combat.

Raya returned to the United States in September and recently visited his family in Modesto.

Julia Cortez Raya said Monday that her son served in Fallujah: "He came back different."

Raya told family members he did not want to return to Iraq. But his father said the family believed by the end of his holiday visit, Raya had decided to make the best of the 2½ years he had left in the Marines.

He rejoined his unit at Camp Pendleton on Jan. 2. Sheriff's Lt. Bill Heyne said Raya was last seen at Camp Pendleton Saturday.

He reportedly told fellow soldiers he was going to get a quick bite to eat. Instead, he showed up in Ceres 24 hours later, armed with an SKS assault rifle. The rifle is a Chinese version of the weapon that Raya was trained to use in the Marines, Heyne said.

Video cameras catch carnage

The first moments of the three-hour drama were caught by video cameras at George's Liquors, 2125 Caswell Ave., near Central Avenue.

The tape shows Raya firing one round into the pavement of the store's parking lot. He then walks into the store.

According to police, Raya told the clerk that he had just been shot at and asked the clerk to call 911, Heyne said.

Steven Marchant, working at the store Sunday night, said he was standing in front of the store when he saw Raya walking toward him from across the street about 8 p.m. Raya was wearing a poncho and yelling "how much he hated the world," Marchant said.

Marchant recognized Raya as a friend of the owner's brother and a regular customer.

Marchant went into the store when Raya stopped at the front door and asked him to call police.

Another employee tried to calm Raya down. Then the employee realized Raya had a gun under the poncho. After Raya walked out, the employees locked the door and called police.

Raya waited outside, a surveillance videotape shows.

About 8:07 p.m., about two minutes after the call, Ryno and a police trainee pulled up into the parking lot of Jiro Tires Plus, a neighboring business that faces Central Avenue. The trainee's name was not released.

As the two officers peered around the corner of a building to locate Raya, a third officer pulled into the same parking lot. Raya opened fire on all three, hitting Ryno — who had stepped out from behind the building — several times in the leg and once in the lower back.

Raya then rushed the trainee, firing several times but missing. The trainee and the third officer, whose name was not released, shot back.

Raya ducked around the corner of George's. After a few seconds, he saw Stevenson pull up in front of the liquor store. Raya opened fire again, shooting through the window of a white car in the parking lot and hitting Stevenson.

He then ran out of view of the camera.

Stevenson, lying injured on the ground, was shot twice in the back of the head, Heyne said.

Witnesses: Raya appeared calm

"I was walking in my back yard to use my spa when I heard a horrible grinding noise," said Norm Travis, whose home is on Glenwood Drive, around the corner from George's.

"Then an alarm went off and there was a bunch of yelling and screaming and then another round of shots," he said.

"We knew that it was an automatic weapon," said his wife, Karen Travis.

Witnesses told police that after shooting the officers, Raya calmly walked east on Caswell and disappeared, either into a house or a back yard.

Within minutes, officers from the Ceres, Modesto, Turlock and Newman police departments, as well as the Stanislaus and Merced sheriff's offices and the California Highway Patrol, responded.

Nearly one square mile of the city's streets were closed as a CHP helicopter hovered and police officers and SWAT teams took positions around the neighborhood.

Police officers began shooting out street lights to diminish Raya's vision, officers said.

Residents were told to lock their doors and turn off their lights, said Kim Rose, 25, who lives about one block from the liquor store. She had been in the store about 20 minutes before the shooting.

"We heard a lot of gunfire, and I mean a lot of gunfire," Rose said. "Then a few minutes later, police were walking up and down the street with guns drawn, yelling for everyone to go back in their houses."

George Newton, who lives two blocks from the store on Beachwood Drive, said his 42-year-old daughter was visiting him when the neighborhood was locked down. She wasn't allowed to leave the home.

"She slept on my couch last night," Newton said. "She was stuck here until 4:30 a.m."

Some neighbors evacuated

Across the street, the Garcia family was evacuated. Their home was believed to be directly behind the home in which Raya was hiding. Members of a SWAT team took over the Garcia's house, Kandy Garcia said, positioning themselves in her back yard and on her neighbor's bal-cony.

"They were nice and professional but very firm and matter-of-fact," Garcia said. "They said we had to leave now."

She grabbed her four children and stayed the night at her mother's house.

The CHP helicopter beamed its light into the yards of homes on the south side of Beachwood and north side of Caswell.

After about two hours, officers began a slow house-to-house search, according to a press release issued Monday.

"Our poor neighbors across the street were evacuated, so they locked their doors," Norm Travis said. "Then about an hour later, the SWAT team broke down their front door to search for the suspect."

About 11:08 p.m., Raya jumped over a backyard fence from a home on Caswell and ended up in an alley between Glenwood and Myrtlewood drives.

Police say he fired at four officers who were positioned at the Glenwood end of the alley, about 100 yards away. The officers fired back and struck him multiple times.

He dropped his rifle but started running toward them. He motioned as if he was going for a second weapon, officers said, so they continued to fire.

He fell to the ground and died at the scene.

His body was still in the alley Monday afternoon as investigators worked the scene.

Police said that an exact number of rounds fired by Raya and police had not been determined Monday evening, but it was probably more than 60.

Police also released the liquor store video tape. De Werk said he wanted the public to see the tape so they could understand not only what happened but "what's really going on in the world."

Bee staff writer Patrick Giblin can be reached at 578-2347 or pgiblin [at] modbee.com.

Bee staff writers Joel Hood and Eddie Brown contributed to this report.

more articles on the Bee's website
Deadly incident shocks Ceres residents
Community left to grieve, wonder why a Marine would kill a policeman in quiet city


ADRIAN MENDOZA/THE BEE

Ceres Police Chief Art de Werk and his troops are mourning one man while pulling for the other.
ADRIAN MENDOZA/THE BEE




JOAN BARNETT LEE/THE BEE

George Newton looks at the scene of the shooting over his neighbor's backyard fence on Beachwood Drive. The dead man under the tarp is Andres Raya. Police say he killed one Ceres police officer and critically wounded another in a Sunday evening shooting at George's Liquors.
JOAN BARNETT LEE/THE BEE

DEBBIE NODA/THE BEE

Mourners of Howard Stevenson come forward for spiritual guidance at a prayer sevice at the Ceres Christian Church.
DEBBIE NODA/THE BEE

MARTY BICEK/THE BEE

Police tape surrounds George's Liquors early Monday as police investigate the Sunday night shootings that left one Ceres police officer dead and another wounded.
MARTY BICEK/THE BEE



By JULISSA McKINNON
BEE STAFF WRITER
Last Updated: January 11, 2005, 01:47:41 PM PST

CERES — Flags flew at half-staff. Homecoming was postponed. And 75 people gathered at a church Monday night, raising their hands in prayers and songs of mourning.

All day, this suburban city grieved for two fallen police veterans who were gunned down Sunday night within several blocks of their homes.

The ambush that killed Howard "Howie" Stevenson and severely wounded Sam Ryno was the first police slaying in the city's history. The last peace officer killed in the line of duty here was a constable in the early 1900s, before Ceres was incorporated in 1919, according to Sgt. Hollie Hall.

Sunday's violence sent shock waves through a city of 37,800 that residents often describe as ideal for raising children.

One high school student, walking home past yellow crime scene tape, said no one could have expected that a Marine, trained to protect the United States, would turn on police officers who share the same mission.

But that's what happened outside George's Liquors after 19-year-old Andres Raya told a clerk to call 911, claiming someone had shot at him. Raya waited for officers to arrive, then opened fire on them with an assault rifle.

Stevenson, 39, a 20-year-veteran with Ceres Police Department, died almost instantly from bullet wounds to his upper body.

Raya also wounded Ryno, 49, shooting him in his legs and lower back. Ryno is listed in critical condition at Memorial Medical Center, according to Ceres Police Chief Art de Werk. "His prognosis looks good," de Werk said Monday at a press conference.

During Monday night's vigil, an unidentified man said he attended the police academy with Ryno, whom he described as quiet and gentle.

"Some thought he wouldn't make it because he was too quiet," he said. "He proved them wrong because he proved to be finest."

Carolyn Giamboni, whose son was best friends with Stevenson, recalled that whenever Stevenson was on patrol, he would drive by their house and shine a light in their window to signal everything was OK.

"He was such a special guy. He was cool, calm, knew how to defuse a situation," she said. "I know we were safe at night."

At Ceres police headquarters, where the two police officers were admired as leaders, the mood Monday was predictably somber.

Patty Bacich, a records clerk who works at the front desk, said the department had been "extremely quiet" all day Monday.

"There's a common feeling from the community," she said. "We're all feeling the same. We're such a small agency. It's like we're all family."

By Monday afternoon, more than a dozen bouquets had filled the front lobby of the station.

The event will likely take a psychological toll on officers throughout the region, according to Modesto public information officer Rick Applegate.

"It creates a great deal of anxiety for other police officers and makes us realize we're putting our lives in danger every time we hit the streets," he said.

For a few terrorizing hours Sunday night, civilians also felt danger.

Grant Childers said he witnessed shots fired and an officer hit the ground from his window. At that moment he recalled thinking: "I just hope everyone I know is OK."

When he called 911, Childers said, a dispatcher told him to keep ducking.

"It's amazing to think this could happen in our town," he added.

Some families were evacuated to nearby Ceres High School as police searched for Raya from yard to yard.

One third-grader fell to the floor when bullets pierced his home, according to Walt Hanline, the superintendent of Ceres Unified School District. The shooting caused trauma in the lives of many students, Hanline said, especially family members of the officers and of the shooter who attend Ceres schools.

Because of the tragedy, homecoming events scheduled Friday at the high school have been postponed until the end of the month.

"It's a tragic event for our community," Hanline said. "It's not a time to be celebrating."

The City Council also canceled its Monday night meeting. City Manager Tim Kerr said council members and city workers, many with close ties to police officers, were devastated.

Nonetheless, Linda Ryno, the wife of Sam Ryno, tried coming to work Monday morning, and was sent home, he added.

Dozens of visitors came to visit Ryno all day Monday at Memo-rial Medical Center, according to Randy Van Diemen, a junior volunteer there.

Applegate said the recuperating officer appreciates everyone's support.

"Sam's asking people to keep him in their prayers," Applegate said. "But Sam's in a lot of pain. He doesn't want a lot of visitors."

Bee staff writer Todd Milbourn contributed to this report.

Bee staff writer Julissa McKinnon can be reached at 578-2324 or jmckinnon [at] modbee.com.

other articles include:
Cop, Gunman Dead

Raya's family, friends stunned by deadly act

A quiet Sunday night takes fatal turn

Transition from war to home is not easy

The Shootout, Minute By Minute

Officer Profiles

Law Enforcement Officers Killed In Line Of Duty

Video and still images of officer shooting


by Mahtin

"It was premeditated, planned, an ambush," Ceres Police Chief Art de Werk said. "It was a suicide by cop."

Ok, since when is it in police officers' job description that they fulfill people's suicide wishes?

by bro d
Excuse me, but you are an idiot. Police officers have the right to defend themselves whether or not the subject is trying to commit suicide. Don't be stupid.
by Think
As I would agree with you 100% that police offices have the right to defend themselves. They have an obligation to the communities that they serve to diffuse violent situations to protect people from getting hurt. Peaceful methods should be tried first. Obviously, this man was not going to go peacefully when he executed a police officer.

I still think at this time that other means of diffusing should take precedent before lethal tactics are applied. Using a stun gun, tazer or other tactics that police are trained in. Could they have done this ? I don't think that they could have while keeping themselves SAFE. Cops are people that have every right to ensure that they get to go home and see their loved ones. They did their job, a difficult one, but one that needs to be done noneless.

I am a liberal, but sometimes other liberals have me shaking my head. These police officers deserve to be in our prayers. They deserve to be commended for what they did.
by Daniel
I'm a Progressive and also an ex-Marine. I regret these tragic deaths, both of the Marine and of the police officer. As for the policeman who shot and killed the Marine, I have to say that when someone is coming at you with an assault rifle, you have to defend yourself. That's the way it is. The policeman is NOT to be blamed.

The real culprit here is our chicken-hawk president who started the unnecessary war in Iraq and sent American soldiers and Marines to fight and die for Halliburton, Bechtel, Chevron and other corporations.

by repost
http://news.scotsman.com/latest.cfm?id=3989210

By Mark Sage, PA, in New York

A 19-year-old US Marine committed “suicide by cop” rather than return to Iraq, police said today.

Andres Raya killed one police officer and critically injured another before being shot dead.

The gun battle erupted on the streets of the normally quiet Californian neighbourhood of Ceres on Sunday night after Raya apparently ambushed two officers.

After the initial ambush, police arrived at the scene in force. Three hours later a second gunfight erupted, with dozens of shots fired.

Ceres Police Chief Art de Werk confirmed that Sergeant Howard Stevenson, 39, was killed and officer Sam Ryno, 50, was critically injured with multiple bullet wounds.

Police told the Modesto Bee newspaper that Raya appeared determined to die rather than return to duty in Iraq.

“It was premeditated, planned, an ambush,” said Mr de Werk.

“It was a suicide by cop.”

Raya was finally gunned down as he ran towards a group of officers, and apparently reached for a second weapon.

Raya returned to the US in September after spending seven months in Iraq.

He used an assault rifle, similar to the one he was trained to use in the military, for the attack.

Julia Cortez Raya told the newspaper that her son served in Fallujah.

She said: “He came back different.”
by JQP
The Presidient of this country has absolutely nothing to do with this case. Maybe that is what is wrong with "Progressives" and liberals, you guys always want to blame someone else. Here's a thought, HOW ABOUT WE HOLD THE MURDERER ACCOUNTABLE FOR HIS OWN ACTIONS? He alone chose to use that rifle.
by Lt. Mark Candies
The concept of officers using the "least intrusive level of force" is not only a liberal appraoch to use of force; it is dangerous for officers. The incident in Ceres, Calf., was an "Immediate Defense of Life" situation, these officers were ambushed and had no obligation other than to protect themselves by whatever means possible!
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