Hadley Palmer Guilty Of Sex Charges

Hadley Palmer mugshot photos

Hadley Palmer is a rich woman from Connecticut who was just found guilty of filming people including a minor without permission however the State would drop the more serious charges that including child pornography. The odd part of this case is most of it is sealed so we do not know all that took place behind closed doors and legal experts are predicting her sentence could be as little as ninety days. Chances are a whole lot of money changed hands somewhere along the way or the judge was in a very forgiving mood. As mentioned before Hadley Palmer was facing felony charges of employing a minor in an obscene performance, conspiracy to employ a minor in an obscene performance, and second-degree child pornography.

Hadley Palmer More News

In a Greenwich enclave whose multimillion-dollar estates are favored by hedge fund moguls and come with their own private security force, the secret videos went undetected for nearly a year.

The recordings showed several minors in intimate situations without their knowledge, according to the authorities, who classified one of them as an “obscene performance.”

Now the source of growing chatter in town, the videos were the work of one of the neighborhood’s own.

The woman who recorded them, Hadley Palmer, 53, pleaded guilty in January to several felony charges in the voyeurism case. Last week, the judge sealed the court records, over the objections of a reporter for The Associated Press, highlighting the tension between open access to court records and calls for victims’ privacy

A Greenwich psychologist has also been arrested on a charge that he had failed to report the matter, as required by Connecticut’s child welfare laws.

The authorities say that Hadley Palmer committed the crimes in 2017 and 2018 in Belle Haven, where public records show that she had been living in a $10 million 19th-century Victorian home overlooking Long Island Sound. The enclave is known for the 1975 slaying of Martha Moxley and the now-overturned conviction of Michael Skakel, a Kennedy cousin, in her murder.

In Belle Haven, privacy is paramount — so much so that the bylaws strictly prohibit outsiders from toting cameras.

Hadley Palmer was arrested last October on several charges that included employing a minor in an obscene performance, three counts of voyeurism, second-degree possession of child sexual abuse imagery and risk of injury to a child.

All three victims were minors at the time of the crimes, Captain Mark E. Zuccerella, a Greenwich Police Department spokesman, said on Monday. At least one of the victims was 15 or younger, prompting the child endangerment charge, the police said.

As part of a plea deal, prosecutors agreed to drop all but the voyeurism and child endangerment charges.

According to the agreement — one of the few unsealed documents in the case — Ms. Palmer will be required to register as a sex offender. Prosecutors have recommended that she serve 90 days to five years in prison, along with 20 years of probation.

Her sentencing is scheduled for August, but Hadley Palmer was already admitted on Feb. 4 to the York Correctional Institution, a women’s prison in Niantic, Conn., where she is inmate No. 439165, according to the Connecticut Department of Correction. It was not immediately clear whether Ms. Palmer was trying to get a head start on her sentence.

For several months, Ms. Palmer’s arrest remained largely obscured from the glare of the public and the media. Her lawyer moved in January to seal the case file and close all court proceedings, citing privacy concerns related to the victims, whose own lawyers supported that measure.

Hadley Palmer, whose father founded a hedge fund and who has been frequently photographed at charity benefits in Greenwich and New York City, was released on $750,000 bond.

Last week, a judge in Connecticut Superior Court in Stamford granted a motion to seal the case, a move that had been opposed by The Associated Press. During a Feb. 1 hearing, Dave Collins, a veteran reporter for the wire service based in Connecticut, said that the handling of the case after Ms. Palmer’s arrest had set a disturbing precedent, according to an audio recording of the proceeding obtained by The New York Times through a public records request.

“The appearance is almost as if this is a second-tier of justice, where some people keep things secret,” Mr. Collins said.

Mr. Collins said during the hearing that it was commonplace for the names of defendants and court dates to appear on a public website maintained by the Connecticut Judicial Branch, especially for those accused of crimes in which the victims were children. One of the few items that appeared online, he said, was a one-page notice about the hearing on her request to seal the case.

“The public needs to know how these cases are handled and adjudicated,” Mr. Collins said. “Everybody else’s case is online. Why isn’t Mrs. Palmer’s case?”

Michael T. Meehan, a lawyer for Ms. Palmer, responded during the hearing that his client had not sought special treatment and that her name had appeared on a printout of the docket in the courthouse lobby on at least four occasions. The defendant never asked to keep her information private before the motion to the seal the file, he said.

Mr. Meehan did not immediately respond to several requests for additional comment.

During the hearing, Judge John F. Blawie of the Connecticut Superior Court said that he had no control of the online records in the case.

“There is no two-tiered justice,” Judge Blawie said.

In his ruling on Wednesday, Judge Blawie wrote that protecting the victims in the case outweighed keeping the case file open.

“If the defendant may be considered as having thrust herself into the public spotlight by virtue of her wrongful behavior and subsequent prosecution, the same may not be said of those parties already adversely impacted by this case,” Judge Blawie wrote.

Through a judicial branch spokeswoman, Judge Blawie declined to comment further.

Eugene J. Riccio, a lawyer for one of the victims, said in an email on Friday that his client appreciated the court’s move to protect privacy. And Audrey A. Felsen, who represents another victim, said that the sealing order had nothing to do with the defendant — it was a victims’ rights issue. Lawyers for the other victims either declined to comment or did not respond to messages.

Just over a month after her initial arrest, Hadley Palmer was arrested a second time for violating certain terms and conditions of her pretrial release, according to court records, which did not specify what those violations were. As part of the plea agreement, prosecutors agreed to drop the charge associated with her second arrest.

In December, Dr. Jerome F. Brodlie, 83, a psychologist who specializes in treating children and adolescents and is affiliated with Greenwich Hospital, was arrested in connection with the case, the authorities said. He was charged with failing to report abuse, neglect or injury of a child or imminent risk of serious harm to a child, a misdemeanor.

Dr. Brodlie did not respond to an email seeking comment on Thursday, and his lawyer, Andrew B. Bowman, did not respond to requests for comment on Thursday and Friday. Pleading information for Dr. Brodlie was not available because his case was sealed, and his status with Greenwich Hospital was not immediately clear. A request for comment was also left for the hospital.

Court records show that Hadley Palmer applied in October to a pretrial accelerated rehabilitation program, a pathway typically reserved for first-time offenders in lower-level criminal cases to avoid jail time. She later withdrew her application and agreed to the plea agreement in January.

Hadley Palmer, who has four children, is the daughter of Jerrold Fine, who in 1976 started Charter Oak Partners Management in Westport, Conn., one of the first hedge funds, according to a profile of him on the website of the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania.

Online searches for Hadley Palmer yielded an array of photos of her at charity benefits and society events on Connecticut’s Gold Coast and in Manhattan. There was a gala at Sotheby’s in New York benefiting pharmaceutical advances for the treatment of Alzheimer’s disease and a Wall Street tennis challenge at a private club in Greenwich to support ovarian cancer research, both in 2016.

https://www.nytimes.com/2022/02/14/nyregion/hadley-palmer-connecticut-access-court-records.html

Nicholas Ecker Starts Fatal Fire Kills Baby

Nicholas Ecker

Nicholas Ecker is from Kansas that would start a fire that would kill an infant inside of the home. According to court documents Nicholas Ecker was mad at his former partner and would start her home on fire which would kill an infant inside. Some news reports are saying that Nicholas Ecker is actually the father of the dead baby however this has not been confirmed. Nicholas Ecker has been in and out of jail including charges of domestic assault against the former partner which were later drop. Now the Ecker is facing arson and murder charges.

  • News reports are confirming Nicholas Ecker was the father of the infant who died in the fire

Nicholas Ecker More News

A man has been charged in connection with the death of a baby and house fire in Shawnee that happened over the weekend.

According to court documents, Nicholas A. Ecker was charged Monday with first-degree murder and aggravated arson.

The court documents state that the charges are in connection with the Shawnee fatal house fire from early Sunday morning on West 69th Terrace, which led to the death of a child born in 2020.

The boy’s mother posted pictures and videos of the child Monday on social media, saying the family would be setting up a GoFundMe account at some point. On her Facebook, she identifies the man charged as the baby’s father.

Shawnee police have taken one person into custody in the Sunday morning house fire that killed a baby.

The Shawnee Police Department and Shawnee Fire Department are conducting a joint investigation into the fire. Crews responded around 1 a.m. early Sunday morning to the home on West 69th Terrace, just off of Larsen Lane.

The house was fully engulfed in flames, and crews ended up pulling a dead infant from the home. There were no other injuries reported in the fire.

Authorities did not elaborate Monday morning on their update other than to say one person was taken into custody.

Stay with KCTV5 News for more on this developing story.

https://www.wibw.com/2022/02/15/court-docs-man-charged-with-murder-after-setting-fire-that-killed-baby/

Nicholas Ecker Other News

A man is facing murder charges in a Shawnee house fire early Sunday that killed a baby boy.

Court records say Nicholas Ecker, of Prairie Village, has been charged with arson and first-degree murder. He is scheduled to be arraigned Tuesday.

“It’s hard to process something like this,” said Cory Holmes, a family friend.

There is a growing memorial near the home, which went up in flames just before 1 a.m. Sunday.

“Just shock and awe, I’d never see anything like this happen to this family,” Holmes said.

We’re learning new information about the suspect in connection with the fire. The Johnson County District Court website lists him as Nicholas Adam Ecker.

He appeared in Johnson County Court Monday afternoon on suspicion of violating a protection order against the child’s mother.

He’s now facing charges of first-degree murder and aggravated arson with risk bodily harm. Ecker’s bond was set at $1 million cash.

“They’re a great family so they need all the support they can get,” Holmes said.

Nicholas Ecker More News

The father of an infant killed in a house fire in suburban Kansas City, Kansas, has been charged with first-degree murder and other counts in the case.

The fire was reported around 1 a.m. Sunday in Shawnee, and firefighters battling the flames found the body of the infant inside home. Television station WDAF reports that police later arrested 28-year-old Nicholas Adam Ecker.

Ecker was charged Monday in Johnson County Court Monday with first-degree murder and aggravated arson. Ecker is also charged with felony stalking, domestic aggravated assault and illegal possession of a firearm. He is being held on $1 million bond.

https://salinapost.com/posts/e0c3501c-568f-4566-8092-febcade9354f

Nicholas Ecker More News

Accused child murderer Nicholas Ecker appeared in Johnson County District Court for a preliminary hearing Thursday via video conference from county jail.

All four outstanding cases against Ecker, who was arrested Sunday and charged with first-degree murder and aggravated arson for allegedly setting fire to a Shawnee home that left a small child dead, were combined.

The deadly fire happened shortly before 1 a.m. on Sunday in the 10500 block of West 69th Terrace in Shawnee.

He is scheduled to appear again for a scheduling hearing for all four pending cases at 10:30 a.m. on March 31

Ecker, 28, has an extensive criminal history in Johnson and Wyandotte counties.

Among the current pending cases, Ecker was arrested in November 2019 for domestic violence for allegedly strangling a woman and felon in possession of a firearm

The domestic violence charge was dropped as part of a plea agreement, but he was placed on probation, which ran through Feb. 6, 2022, for the weapons charge.

He was arrested and charged Jan. 4, 2022, with aggravated domestic battery for allegedly choking a different woman. KSHB 41 News does not name victims in domestic violence cases.

The court issued a no-contact order at that time and he was freed after posting bond.

Ecker, who had the case continued at a hearing Jan. 13, allegedly violated the protection order put in place in the domestic violence case on Feb. 4.

Court records show the charges in that case weren’t filed until Monday against Ecker.

The violation of a protection order charge was amended Monday to stalking after being served, which bumps it from a Class A misdemeanor to a Level 9 felony

According to the amended complaint, Ecker is accused of “recklessly engaging in at least one act constituting a course of conduct, that violates the provisions of the order and would cause a reasonable person to fear for their safety, or the safety of a member of their immediate family, and the targeted person was actually placed in such fear.”

After he was arrested on the new domestic violence charge, Johnson County moved Jan. 26 to revoke his probation in the 2019 case, but he not been re-arrested and returned to jail yet.

That case along with the murder and arson charge, the second domestic violence charge and the amended charge for violating an order of protection remain pending in Johnson County court, but Ecker’s criminal history — including a years-long stint in state prison — goes back more than a decade.

When Ecker was 15 years old, he was charged in April 2009 for falsely reporting a crime.

Six months later, Ecker was charged Oct. 7, 2009, with battery and Oct. 21, 2009, with possession of an illegal butterfly knife and drug paraphernalia.

Two days later, Ecker was charged with damaging the plumbing and a door as well as disorderly conduct at a juvenile detention facility in Prairie Village.

All four cases were combined and he received one year of probation for the incidents, but the problems continued.

Ecker was charged with disorderly conduct again on Nov. 18, 2009, and added two new charges — making a criminal threat and battery — on Jan. 21, 2010. The criminal threat charge was amended to assault in June 2010.

Three months later, Ecker was arrested and charged with possession of a firearm with identification marks changed or altered, unlawful possession of a firearm, and theft of wheels.

Ecker was charged for the first time as an adult in September 2011 after being arrested for marijuana possession then a few weeks later with stealing a Dodge Dakota truck and Kawasaki motorcycle.

Both arrests came within days or weeks of his 18th birthday and Johnson County Judge Brenda Cameron noted that “reasonable efforts” to help Ecker as a minor “have been made and failed.”

“Juvenile (Ecker) has over 10 prior cases, has had virtually every juvenile service — including probation, house arrest, juvenile correctional facility and aftercare,” but he remained a persistent offender.

Johnson County moved to revoke his probation in the stolen vehicles case after his release from prison and Ecker’s probation was revoked on Sept. 12, 2016.

He went back to prison until June 9, 2018.

A little more than a year later, Ecker was charged with aggravated domestic battery in November 2019 for allegedly strangling a woman, but not the same woman from the complaint last month.

He also was charged with illegal possession of a firearm by a felon.

The domestic battery charge was dropped in May 2020 as part of a plea agreement, but Ecker pleaded guilty to the weapons charge and was placed on probation for 18 months at an August 2020 sentencing.

Ecker’s probation in that case ended earlier this month, but it was pending revocation prior to the deadly Shawnee fire that killed a 1-year-old child family has identified as “Junior.”

https://www.kshb.com/news/crime/johnson-county-murder-suspect-nicholas-ecker-appears-in-court

Letecia Stauch Murders Stepson Gannon Staunch

Letecia Stauch

Letecia Stauch is a woman from Colorado who has been charged with the murder of her eleven year old stepson Gannon Staunch. According to court documents Letecia Stauch would shoot and stab the eleven year old boy while his father was serving in the National Guard. Letecia Stauch would tell police that Gannon had disappeared after going to a friends house. Police in Florida would find the eleven year old’s remain stuck in a suitcase and underneath a bridge in Pensacola.

Letecia Stauch whose trial is going to begin at the end of March 2022 has recently changed her plea to not guilty by reason of insanity. Since being locked up Letecia Stauch has faced additional charges for attacking a deputy and planning a jail break.

Letecia Stauch More News

On Friday, an El Paso County woman accused of killing her 11-year-old stepson, Gannon Stauch, asked to change her plea to not guilty by reason of insanity.

The judge said he will allow the plea to go forward, but Stauch will have to go through a mental health evaluation.

The evaluation is expected to take longer than normal and the judge said he did not know if the trial date was “in jeopardy”.

Investigators believe Letecia Stauch killed her stepson in their Lorson Ranch home on January 27, 2020, before driving his body to the Florida panhandle where it was eventually discovered in March 2020.

Stauch faces over a dozen charges, including first-degree murder.

Stauch’s defense also asked for a motion not to have a jury due to a large amount of publicity the case has received, which will make it difficult to find a fair jury.

Stauch’s defense attorney said he wants more time to discuss the jury with Stauch, since the decision is ultimately hers.

Both the judge and the prosecution argued that waiving a jury would be premature.

The judge went on to address Stauch directly and said without a jury, she gives up the possibility of a second chance at a trial. He went on to ensure her that, in his experience, jurors come in with an open mind.

“I think jurors really, really take their obligation seriously,” said the judge. “They are going to decide this case based on fact.”

The judge says he believes they should vacate the trial date and keep the March 17 date as the next court appearance.

The trial date will depend on when the mental health evaluation is completed.

https://www.koaa.com/news/covering-colorado/letecia-stauch-pleads-not-guilty-by-reason-of-insanity

Letecia Stauch Other News

Thursday pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder and 12 other charges.

In addition to the murder charge, Stauch’s charges include child abuse and tampering with evidence related to the killing of 11-year-old Gannon Stauch. If convicted of the top charge, she faces life in prison.

Stauch appeared in the courtroom for the first time in months after opting to appear virtually for earlier hearings. Fourth Judicial District Judge Gregory Werner ordered she appear in-person to enter a plea. She wore a short-sleeved, orange jumpsuit and shackles around her hands and ankles that attached to a chain around her waist.

Though the not guilty plea was not for reason of insanity, defense attorney Josh Tolini notified the court that he would likely be entering evidence from a mental health expert on at least some of the charges, though not specifically related to the murder count.

Colorado law says Stauch must now undergo a mental health evaluation, Tolini said after the hearing; he and District Attorney Michael Allen, the lead prosecutor on the case, will argue at a December court date about the “fine minutia” of what that evaluation could look like.

Allen said after the hearing that the move was “a little bit rare.” 

Multiple mental health experts had previously determined Stauch was competent, causing the judge to determine in January that she could stand trial.

Werner on Thursday scheduled the trial for March 28. It is expected to last about six weeks.

Investigators believe Stauch killed Gannon sometime after 2 p.m. on Jan. 27, 2020. She seemingly cooperated with authorities who were searching for Gannon when he was reported missing, but authorities quickly began to suspect a homicide. Deputies searched the Stauch home on Feb. 3.

The Santa Rosa Sheriff’s Office in Florida announced it had found Gannon’s body less than two months later on March 18. Santa Rosa County is on the Florida Panhandle, east of Pensacola.

Investigators determined that Gannon was shot in the head and stabbed in the chest and back.

A weapons expert determined bullets found in Gannon’s head and his pillowcase matched the type of ammunition used in a gun found on the nightstand in Stauch’s bedroom. The gun had Stauch’s DNA on it, but also the DNA of at least two other people, an investigator testified.

Investigators found Gannon’s blood on the bed, on the wall next to it and stained into the floor beneath it.

Defense attorneys sought to create doubt that Stauch committed the murder by suggesting that someone else could have entered the home around the time Gannon died, and sought to tie home security data with the unknown DNA on the gun investigators found.

But FBI agent Andrew Cohen testified in September that Stauch was the only person investigators believe could have committed the murder.

“I haven’t seen any evidence of anyone else coming into the house,” Cohen said

https://gazette.com/news/courts/letecia-stauch-accused-of-killing-stepson-enters-plea-on-murder-and-other-charges/article_5e944536-3d84-11ec-8a04-f390620705cb.html

Tobias Gutierrez Arrested In Albuquerque Stabbing Frenzy

Tobias Gutierrez

Tobias Gutierrez has been arrested in the Albuquerque New Mexico stabbing frenzy that left eleven people with injuries. According to court documents Tobias Gutierrez allegedly rode a BMX bike and started to stab random people. When it was all said and done eleven people suffered from injuries. Police In Albuquerque are not sure what set off the stabbing spree that lasted for a few hours on February 13, 2021. Tobias Gutierrez who has a previous record has been charged with multiple counts of assault.

Tobias Gutierrez More News

 Police in Albuquerque arrested a man suspected of stabbing 11 people as he rode a bicycle around the city over the weekend, leaving two victims critically injured, authorities said.

The suspect was identified as Tobias Gutierrez, a 42-year-old man with a criminal history that includes felony offenses that range from burglary to battery and possession of a controlled substance.

He was booked into jail on charges of aggravated battery with a deadly weapon, police in New Mexico’s largest city said in a statement Monday. Booking documents said he was homeless.

The stabbings appeared to have been committed at random within hours along Central Avenue, one of the city’s main thoroughfares. One of the crime scenes included a homeless encampment and another was near a smoke shop where the suspect asked a victim for money and yelled obscenities before swinging a knife, according to a criminal complaint.

“There doesn’t seem to be any rhyme or reason” to the attacks, said police spokesman Gilbert Gallegos.

There was no immediate information on whether Gutierrez had a lawyer who could speak on his behalf.

New Mexico court records show Gutierrez also had been charged over the years with drug possession and driving while intoxicated.

In 2014, Gutierrez failed to appear in court for driving on a revoked license, records show. He responded to the court with a handwritten note saying that he was in federal custody in another county and that he was making an effort to better himself while incarcerated.

His federal prison sentence stemmed from a case in which he entered a tribal casino north of Albuquerque while carrying a revolver and ammunition.

Authorities said Gutierrez got into an altercation with a casino security officer, dropped the revolver, got into a vehicle and led police on a chase through a suburb until he crashed and was found hiding.

Records show he was released from federal custody in 2020.

Sunday’s attacks began around 11:15 a.m., when officers responded to a crime scene downtown and found a man suffering a laceration to his hand. About an hour later, another call came in about the stabbing outside the smoke shop near the University of New Mexico a couple miles away.

Police were called to two more stabbings along Central Avenue over the next two hours before another call came in at 2 p.m. about a man trying to stab people outside a convenience store. Arriving officers found two victims with neck wounds.

Within the next 20 minutes, two more calls came in — and the final one involved a victim stabbed outside of a restaurant along another busy street less than a mile away.

The witnesses identified a man on a bike armed with a large knife.

According to the criminal complaint, an officer saw a suspect who fit the description and saw him toss something into a trash can before the officer stopped the suspect. A search warrant was issued and a knife was found.

The victims were taken to different hospitals and while two suffered critical injuries, all of those hospitalized were in stable condition, police said. Some were treated for their injuries and released.

https://www.kake.com/story/45870206/police-arrest-man-suspected-of-stabbing-11-in-albuquerque

Steven Carrillo Pleads Guilty In David Patrick Underwood Murder

Steven Carrillo

Steven Carrillo has changed his plea to guilty in the murder of David Patrick Underwood who was shot and killed at a federal building in Oakland California. According to court documents Steven Carrillo would open fire outside of a Federal building that would kill David Underwood and injure his partner. Steven Carrillo would agree to plead guilty so the death penalty would be taken off of the table. Steven Carrillo is expected to receive a forty year prison sentence. In a separate incident Steven Carillo is facing more murder charges in the death of Sgt. Damon Gutzwiller who was killed a week after the Underwood shooting.

Steven Carrillo More News

A former U.S. Air Force staff sergeant and alleged member of the “boogaloo” extremist movement pleaded guilty Friday in the fatal shooting of a federal security officer in the San Francisco Bay Area amid large 2020 protests against police brutality.

Steven Carrillo, 33, changed his plea to guilty to a federal murder charge in the killing of David Patrick Underwood and to the attempted murder of Underwood’s colleague after federal prosecutors last month agreed not to seek the death penalty.

The men were shot on May 29, 2020, while they stood in a guard shack in front of a federal building in Oakland.

Dressed in an orange jumpsuit in federal court, Carrillo read from a plea agreement, admitting to posting messages on Facebook a day before the shooting asking anyone if they were “down to boo” and saying he was ready to act and not just talk. He also admitted firing 19 rounds from a homemade AR-15 rifle.

“I aligned myself with the anti-government movement and wanted to carry out violent acts against federal law enforcement officers in particular,” Carrillo said.

Prosecutors on Jan. 31 said they would not seek the death penalty, but U.S. District Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers said Friday she is not convinced that she will accept the plea agreement between prosecutors and defense lawyers calling for a 41-year prison sentence.

“I cannot accept a plea unless there was a sufficient independent factual basis for the plea,” she said.
Carillo is scheduled to be sentenced on June 3 but Gonzalez Rogers warned that she could reject the plea agreement if she doesn’t feel prosecutors and defense lawyers do enough to justify the sentence. 

And if she does, Carillo would go to trial and his admissions in court could be used against him, Gonzalez Rogers said. 

Prosecutors have said Carrillo, of Santa Cruz, had ties to the “boogaloo” movement —a concept embraced by a loose network of gun enthusiasts and militia-style extremists. The group started in alt-right culture on the internet with the belief that there is an impending U.S. civil war, according to experts.

Authorities accused Carrillo of fatally shooting Underwood after spraying a guard shack he was in with bullets from a white van.

Underwood’s sister, Angela Underwood Jacobs, called Carillo a “domestic terrorist” during Friday’s hearing.

“Cowards like you fear true bravery,” she said, crying.

Prosecutors said Robert Alvin Justus Jr., of Millbrae, drove the van and faces federal charges of murder and attempted murder in the case. 

The pair is accused of driving to Oakland and taking advantage of the distraction afforded by people marching through the city’s downtown to protest George Floyd’s killing by a police officer in Minneapolis.

A week after the shooting in Oakland, Carrillo allegedly ambushed sheriff’s deputies in Santa Cruz County who were responding to a report of a van containing firearms and bomb-making materials. Sgt. Damon Gutzwiller, 38, was killed and several other law enforcement officials were wounded, according to authorities and court records.

Prosecutors in Santa Cruz charged Carrillo with a slew of felonies, including murder and attempted murder in connection to that killing.

Carrillo pleaded not guilty to Gutzwiller’s killing.

https://www.oxygen.com/crime-news/steven-carrillo-pleads-to-murder-of-david-patrick-underwood