Phoenix Freeway Shooting Suspect: ‘I’m the Wrong Guy’

ABC News

A landscaper arrested in a series of Phoenix freeway shootings told a judge that authorities have “the wrong guy” as investigators stood by their detective work that traced the gun to the suspect after he took it to a pawn shop.

Leslie Allen Merritt Jr. was charged Saturday with counts including aggravated assault, criminal damage, disorderly conduct, carrying out a drive-by shooting and intentional acts of terrorism.  

In a brief court appearance, a prosecutor said the 21-year-old should face a high bail after drivers spent the last three weeks on edge.

“The suspect presents a dramatic and profound threat to the community,” said Ed Leiter of the Maricopa County attorney’s office.

Superior Court Commissioner Lisa Roberts set bail at $1 million, and Merritt, who had remained quiet during the proceedings, asked in a soft-spoken voice to address the court.

“All I have to say is I’m the wrong guy. I tried telling the detectives that. My gun’s been in the pawn shop the last two months. I haven’t even had access to a weapon,” he said as he stood handcuffed in a black and white striped jail uniform.

But a charging document released late Saturday night by Maricopa Superior Court said that investigators determined Merritt had not pawned his gun at the time of the incidents.

Merritt was arrested Friday evening after a SWAT team swarmed him at a Wal-Mart in the suburb of Glendale. Minutes later, Gov. Doug Ducey proclaimed on Twitter, “We got him!”

Arizona Department of Public Safety spokesman Bart Graves said the break in the case was the result of exhaustive investigative work in which weapons from local pawn shops were test-fired at the state crime lab.

Graves said evidence from shell casings and bullet fragments determined that a gun Merritt pawned was used in four of the shootings on Aug. 29 and 30. A tour bus, SUV and two cars were hit by bullets on Interstate 10 on those days.

“Today we are seeing the end result of some incredible police work,” he said at a news conference.

Graves declined to comment on Merritt’s statement in court that his gun was in the pawn shop at the time of the shootings and similar statements made by his family.

“The evidence as you’ll see in the next couple of days speaks for itself,” Graves said. “We’re not going to get in a debate about that.”

Tom Mangan, a special agent with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, which has been assisting in the investigation, said the evidence gathered by DPS leaves “no doubt” the gun used was the one owned and pawned by Merritt.

According to Mangan, a bullet contains certain land and groove impressions after it’s been fired that are unique to a particular firearm.

The charging document released Saturday night said that investigators determined by testing that the bullets and the bullet fragments from four incidents came from a gun that was owned by the suspect. The test of Merritt’s gun by the Arizona Department of Public Safety “fired bullets (that) were matched to the bullets and bullet fragments from the four cases …,” the document said.

A man who identified himself as a manager at Mo-Money Pawn declined to comment Saturday beyond a post on a Facebook page that said detectives contacted the shop Wednesday looking for a certain caliber and make of handgun and examined several weapons.

Eleven vehicles in all were hit by bullets or other projectiles, such as BBs or pellets, while driving along Phoenix freeways between Aug. 29 and Sept. 10. There have been no serious injuries, although a 13-year-old girl’s ear was cut by glass when a bullet shattered a car window.

Department of Public Safety Director Frank Milstead said the investigation continues into who is behind the other shootings.

Messages seeking tips about the shootings will remain posted on electronic signs along freeways, and a $50,000 reward is still available, Graves said.

In an interview with The Associated Press, Merritt’s father was adamant that his son had nothing to do with the shootings and anyone who says he was involved is a “moron.”

Leslie Merritt Sr. said he believes his son is being made a scapegoat by police who were desperate to make an arrest under immense public pressure.

“He has way too much value for human life to even take the slightest or remotest risk of actually injuring someone,” the elder Merritt said. He said his son likes guns but is not a criminal.

Merritt Jr.’s Facebook page, confirmed by his father, has two video clips that show him firing guns into the desert toward a palm tree, exclaiming “whoo” after squeezing off a round.

The Wal-Mart where Merritt Jr. was arrested Friday is 6 miles north of where some of the shootings occurred along I-10, a major route through the city.

The shootings prompted several school districts to keep their buses off freeways, and some commuters altered their routes.

 

http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/phoenix-freeway-shooting-suspect-im-wrong-guy-33891431

6 thoughts on “Phoenix Freeway Shooting Suspect: ‘I’m the Wrong Guy’

  1. Of course he’s the wrong guy. That’s why he was arrested. They needed a wrong guy to stop the search for the right guy, who works for the same people who arrested Mr. Wrong.

    This idiot still thinks our “justice” system concerns itself with guilt and innocence, when they answer to a higher authority now… that being the communist domination of the planet.

  2. This may or may not be a false flag; I see no evidence either way. But if this guy really was the shooter, then I call BS on the pigs’ story of how they caught him.

    Testing all the guns in pawn shops? How could they have known that the gun used in the shootings had been sold to a pawn shop? What were the chances of that, as opposed to the shooter simply keeping the gun, throwing it in a lake, or getting rid of it in some other way? I just find it hard to believe that the pigs would spend all the time and effort necessary to test all those pawn shop gun without first having some lead in that direction.

    It’s more likely that the shooter was caught by license plate readers, cell phone location records, gunshot detectors set up around the area just to catch the shooter, aerial surveillance, or some other means that they don’t want people to know about. Even so, it took them long enough to get him…

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