Sheriff: Man killed by deputies in his California home after neighbor’s burglary call
By Robert Jablon, APThursday, February 18, 2010
Deputies kill man in own home after burglary call
LOS ANGELES — Sheriff’s deputies who thought they were grappling with a burglar shot and killed a man in the bedroom of his California home, authorities said Thursday.
At least 17 shots were fired in the Moreno Valley home on the afternoon of Feb. 8, according to a report by the Riverside County Sheriff’s Department.
Jose Ruiz, 31, was pronounced dead at the scene.
Homicide Lt. Terry Hudson told The Associated Press a handgun was found in Ruiz’s possession but he declined to say whether Ruiz had fired at deputies, who were unhurt.
Cynthia Francia said her husband locked himself out of the home where five children also live and had gone in through the back before the shooting.
“I can’t really say I’m angry. I’m just angry I can’t get the facts,” Francia told the Riverside Press-Enterprise. “I know I have to bury my husband and can’t see him because of what they did to him.”
Francia said her 13-year-old daughter heard the gunshots that killed her stepfather after she was removed from the home by deputies.
The home is located in a growing community of about 186,000 people in northwestern Riverside County, about 70 miles east of downtown Los Angeles.
Deputies went to the home shortly before 3 p.m. after a neighbor reported a possible burglary, Hudson said.
They reported finding an open, damaged garage door on the side of the house and suspected a burglar had forced his way inside, Hudson said.
Deputies entered the home through the garage with their guns drawn and found the 13-year-old, who apparently was off school that day.
The deputies discovered Ruiz hiding in a bedroom and shot him when he physically resisted, Hudson said.
Hudson declined to provide specifics about the shooting but said deputies were in full uniform and had repeatedly identified themselves.
Francia said Ruiz had left her a message earlier in the day saying he was unable to get into the home. She told investigators he lost the keys.
Francia said her husband lived at the home, but the sheriff’s office only acknowledged he lived there at one time.
“There may have been a slight separation. … He may have not been living there full-time,” Hudson said.
Tags: California, Geography, Law Enforcement, Los Angeles, North America, Police, Theft, United States, Violent Crime