Post by 010101010 on Dec 22, 2005 12:29:14 GMT -5
Let me guess..... The cop walked in on his ex girlfriend being fucked by another cop who was a friend or maybe he walked in on a threesome?
Then the stupid fuck turns himself in!
12/21/2005 - PIKESVILLE - Bail was denied Thursday morning for a police officer charged with the shooting deaths of two off-duty Baltimore city officers in a suburban townhome.
One of the victims was the former fiancee of the suspect, Eugene Victor Perry Jr.
Officer Perry, 33, who is charged with two counts of first-degree murder, surrendered shortly after 2 p.m. Wednesday at the county police precinct in nearby Woodlawn about two hours after the shooting, county police spokesman Bill Toohey said.
The two city officers, identified as Adam Vazquez, 26, and Leslie Holliday, 34, were shot shortly after noon. Vazquez was a 4 1/2-year veteran of the city force; Holliday had been on the force for 1 1/2 years and was still on probationary status. They were both assigned to the midnight shift at the city's Northwestern District, authorities said.
Police did not discuss a possible motive for the shootings but said the suspect knew the victims. Holliday's mother, Bernice Johnson, told The Sun that her daughter had been engaged to Perry until last summer, and that Holliday had been dating Vazquez.
Officers found Perry's car and the handgun used in the shootings shortly after he surrendered. Each victim was shot multiple times, and the gun was not Perry's service weapon, Toohey said.
County Police Chief Terrence Sheridan said the bodies were found on the second floor of the townhome. He said there were no signs of forced entry, and that there were three other people inside at the time of the shooting: an adult couple and a small child. Their relationship to Vazquez was uncertain.
At the city's Northwestern District precinct, where Vazquez and Holliday worked, officers were visibly upset Wednesday afternoon, crying and talking among themselves. They declined to talk on the record with a reporter. Crisis counselors were brought in to talk with officers and a flag at the precinct was lowered to half-staff.
"The information I have on Officer Vazquez is that he was an outstanding officer ... from day one, since he walked into the academy," city Police Commissioner Leonard Hamm said at the crime scene.
"Our job now is to come together as a department and carry on the job that we have to do out on the street," Hamm said.
The state Department of General Services police provide security at the state office complexes in Baltimore and Annapolis. Dave Humphrey, a spokesman for the department, said Thursday that the department was preparing to release details about Perry.
The townhome, which is listed in Vazquez's name, is on a quiet, secluded court of about 15 well-kept two-story homes with stone facades part of a small development in Baltimore's northwest suburbs.
Neighbors said Vazquez was friendly, but quiet, and could often be seen walking his small dog. Jerry McDonald, who lives next door, said Vazquez was single and that his cousin, her husband and their two children had been living with Vazquez. McDonald said Vazquez had been dating a female officer who worked with him.
"He was a nice guy," McDonald said.
Another neighbor, Kenneth Seerattan, said the male officer was friendly to the children who lived on the street.
"When police officers die, no matter what the circumstances, it's a sad thing, but especially around Christmastime," Seerattan said.
Then the stupid fuck turns himself in!
12/21/2005 - PIKESVILLE - Bail was denied Thursday morning for a police officer charged with the shooting deaths of two off-duty Baltimore city officers in a suburban townhome.
One of the victims was the former fiancee of the suspect, Eugene Victor Perry Jr.
Officer Perry, 33, who is charged with two counts of first-degree murder, surrendered shortly after 2 p.m. Wednesday at the county police precinct in nearby Woodlawn about two hours after the shooting, county police spokesman Bill Toohey said.
The two city officers, identified as Adam Vazquez, 26, and Leslie Holliday, 34, were shot shortly after noon. Vazquez was a 4 1/2-year veteran of the city force; Holliday had been on the force for 1 1/2 years and was still on probationary status. They were both assigned to the midnight shift at the city's Northwestern District, authorities said.
Police did not discuss a possible motive for the shootings but said the suspect knew the victims. Holliday's mother, Bernice Johnson, told The Sun that her daughter had been engaged to Perry until last summer, and that Holliday had been dating Vazquez.
Officers found Perry's car and the handgun used in the shootings shortly after he surrendered. Each victim was shot multiple times, and the gun was not Perry's service weapon, Toohey said.
County Police Chief Terrence Sheridan said the bodies were found on the second floor of the townhome. He said there were no signs of forced entry, and that there were three other people inside at the time of the shooting: an adult couple and a small child. Their relationship to Vazquez was uncertain.
At the city's Northwestern District precinct, where Vazquez and Holliday worked, officers were visibly upset Wednesday afternoon, crying and talking among themselves. They declined to talk on the record with a reporter. Crisis counselors were brought in to talk with officers and a flag at the precinct was lowered to half-staff.
"The information I have on Officer Vazquez is that he was an outstanding officer ... from day one, since he walked into the academy," city Police Commissioner Leonard Hamm said at the crime scene.
"Our job now is to come together as a department and carry on the job that we have to do out on the street," Hamm said.
The state Department of General Services police provide security at the state office complexes in Baltimore and Annapolis. Dave Humphrey, a spokesman for the department, said Thursday that the department was preparing to release details about Perry.
The townhome, which is listed in Vazquez's name, is on a quiet, secluded court of about 15 well-kept two-story homes with stone facades part of a small development in Baltimore's northwest suburbs.
Neighbors said Vazquez was friendly, but quiet, and could often be seen walking his small dog. Jerry McDonald, who lives next door, said Vazquez was single and that his cousin, her husband and their two children had been living with Vazquez. McDonald said Vazquez had been dating a female officer who worked with him.
"He was a nice guy," McDonald said.
Another neighbor, Kenneth Seerattan, said the male officer was friendly to the children who lived on the street.
"When police officers die, no matter what the circumstances, it's a sad thing, but especially around Christmastime," Seerattan said.