After a Neighbor’s Complaint, Gunman Kills Five
People in Texas Home
The attack on Friday night started after a man was
asked by neighbors to stop shooting in his yard, the authorities said. The
gunman remained at large.
By Maria Jimenez
Moya, Eduardo Medina and Jesus Jiménez
April 29,
2023
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/04/29/us/shooting-texas-san-jacinto.html
CLEVELAND,
Texas — Francisco Oropeza was firing his gun in his yard again on Friday night,
rattling off loud bangs that were keeping Wilson Garcia’s baby awake.
So Mr.
Garcia said he went over to his neighbor and asked if he could stop.
Mr.
Oropeza, who the authorities said had been drinking, said no. His yard, he
said, his rules.
Mr. Garcia,
30, warned that he would call the police. But after Mr. Oropeza, 38, walked
back to his house, he re-emerged with an AR-15.
He walked
toward Mr. Garcia’s cream-colored home, where he shot and killed Mr. Garcia’s
wife, who had called the police and was standing near the entrance.
The rampage
continued inside Mr. Garcia’s home, where the authorities said Mr. Oropeza
fatally shot four other people, “almost execution-style.”
“He wanted
to kill us all to leave no evidence,” Mr. Garcia said in an interview.
The episode
in Cleveland, Texas, which is about 45 miles northeast of Houston, has stunned
a nation already weary of shootings seemingly set off by mundane mix-ups and
interactions, such as a neighborly complaint.
This month,
a 16-year-old in Missouri who rang the wrong doorbell was shot by a homeowner,
a 20-year-old woman in upstate New York was fatally shot after driving into the
wrong driveway, and two cheerleaders in Texas were shot after one got into the
wrong car.
The
shooting on Friday night prompted a sprawling search for the gunman, who may
have fled the area and remained at large as of Saturday evening.
Three other
people were taken to hospitals after the shooting, which happened around 11:30
p.m. Their conditions were not immediately known. The victims were all from
Honduras, officials said.
Four people
were pronounced dead at the scene and a fifth person died at a hospital, the
San Jacinto County Sheriff’s Office said.
The F.B.I.
identified the victims as: Mr. Garcia’s wife, Sonia Guzman, 25; Diana Velazquez
Alvarado, 21; Juliza Molina Rivera, 31; Jose Jonathan Casarez, 18; and Daniel
Enrique Laso, 8. But there was conflicting information on Saturday. Earlier in
the day, the authorities said that among the victims was a 15-year-old girl.
Several law
enforcement agencies, including the F.B.I., were searching homes and wooded
areas on foot and with drones to find Mr. Oropeza, Sheriff Greg Capers of San
Jacinto County said in a phone interview on Saturday.
Sheriff
Capers told reporters that Mr. Oropeza was known to “frequently” fire an AR-15
in his front yard.
Mr. Garcia,
who moved to the United States from Honduras three years ago, said that he had
“never had any problems” with Mr. Oropeza, who had once helped Mr. Garcia take
down a tree.
Mr. Garcia
said that after Mr. Oropeza shot his wife, the gunman chased him. Mr. Garcia
escaped through a window and ran outside.
“I thought
he was going to follow me,” he said. “But after he couldn’t catch me, he went
back to the house to finish them off.”
Mr. Garcia
said he went to a family member’s house to hide. But then he returned to his
home.
“I came
back for my two children,” he said. “They were hiding in the closet. The two
women protecting them when they died — they were hugging them.”
According
to Carlos Ramirez, Mr. Garcia’s brother, the two women who were killed were
shielding a 6-week-old boy and a
3-year-old girl, who survived.
Ramiro
Guzman, the brother of Mr. Garcia’s wife, said in a phone interview that after
Mr. Garcia asked Mr. Oropeza to stop shooting near their house, he sensed
danger and asked his sister to flee.
Ms. Guzman
told him that she did not think Mr. Oropeza would hurt them and stayed put. But
seconds later, the gunman shot her and quickly moved to the living room where
he fatally shot Mr. Guzman’s nephew.
Mr. Guzman
said he quickly grabbed his wife and 6-month-old son and hid in a closet as he
heard the gunman continue to shoot family members. He tried calling the police,
but service was bad, so he called his aunt and asked her to call law
enforcement.
“I could
not get a hold of the police,” Mr. Guzman said in tears. “And he was killing my
family.”
Robert
Freyer, the first assistant district attorney of the criminal district
attorney’s office in San Jacinto County, said there were 10 people in the
house, though Mr. Ramirez said there were 12.
“Everybody
that was shot was shot from the neck up, almost execution-style,” Sheriff
Capers said.
Enrique
Reina, the foreign minister of Honduras, said on Twitter that the Honduran
consulate was in contact with the authorities in Texas and monitoring the
situation.
“We demand
that the full weight of the law be applied against those responsible for this
crime,” he wrote in Spanish.
Susan Ard,
a spokeswoman for the Cleveland Independent School District, said the district
was aware of one victim, a boy in the third grade, who attended Northside
Elementary School.
“All of our
prayers and thoughts are with the families and community impacted by this
horrible tragedy,” she said.
In the
rural community of mostly Latino families, neighbors said on Saturday that the
sound of gunfire in the area was a common occurrence.
Veronica
Pineda, 34, said she did not know Mr. Oropeza and his family but that they had
been living in the neighborhood for about five years. She said they were known
for hosting parties late into the night.
Guadalupe
Calderon, 47, who lives in the neighborhood, said that the shooting could have
happened anywhere but that community members were surprised by the attack.
“We are all
neighbors here, and we have to take care of one another,” she said. “Only God
knows why he did it. Maybe they just didn’t get along.”
Mr. Guzman
said he had left Honduras five years ago to escape violent gangs and to seek
safety and family in Cleveland.
“We came
here to escape violence,” he said, “and found it in America.”
Neelam
Bohra, Edgar Sandoval and Euan Ward contributed reporting.
Eduardo
Medina is a reporter covering breaking news. @byEduardoMedina
Jesus
Jiménez is a general assignment reporter. @jesus_jimz
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