Mesa, Arizona Shooting: Six Shot, One Dead; Suspect Caught

[h1]  Alleged Mesa shooter Ryan Giroux has a long criminal history[/h1]
MESA, Ariz. - An ex-convict accused of shooting and killing one person and wounding five others in a Phoenix suburb has a history of substance abuse and police run-ins, according to court records.

Ryan Giroux, 41, made his first court appearance Thursday as authorities tried to figure out what triggered the rampage that led to an intense, hourslong hunt for a gunman.

Mesa police said the string of crimes Wednesday included a motel shooting, a carjacking and a home invasion and ended with Giroux's arrest Wednesday at a vacant apartment.

Giroux was jailed Thursday on suspicion of murder and numerous other crimes, including armed robbery, kidnapping and aggravated assault. A judge ordered Giroux held in lieu of $2 million bond.

He was taken into custody Wednesday after officers spotted him on an apartment balcony and hit him with a stun gun. Numerous officers led the handcuffed man to a truck parked outside the apartment complex.

Police later identified him as Giroux, who has served three stints in state prison since 1994.

A December 2011 mugshot from Arizona Department of Corrections shows Giroux with several face and neck tattoos, including the word "skinhead" where his eyebrows normally would be. But in the booking photo taken of him yesterday, the tattoos on his chin and an "88" tattoo - which is known to be associated with white supremacy - on his left temple appeared to be gone.

Police said in a court document that Giroux sustained minor facial and other injuries while resisting arrest and struggling with officers.

The police document also summarized statements in which two witnesses said another man was with Giroux when Giroux fired into a motel room. One of the witnesses, a resident of the motel, said the unidentified companion grabbed Giroux by the shirt "and told him they needed to leave the area," the document said.

Mesa police did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the witnesses' statements.

Efforts to identify a lawyer representing Giroux who could comment on the allegations against him were not immediately successful.

During the court appearance, the judge declared Giroux indigent and said he was appointing a lawyer to represent him. A court spokesman said court records indicated Giroux would be represented by the Maricopa County Public Defender's Office. Amanda Martin, an office supervisor, declined to confirm that the office represents Giroux or to comment on his case.

Police said the motive for the shooting at the motel was unclear, but the other three shootings appeared motivated by robbery and the suspect's attempt to flee.

The shootings started with an argument inside a motel room that spilled outside, leaving David James Williams, 29, dead and two women wounded, Mesa police Detective Esteban Flores said. The women were Williams' mother, Lydia Marie Nielson, 51, and Jessica Lee Burgess, 19.

The gunman then shot Isaac Martinez, 20, who was working at a nearby restaurant. Martinez, a culinary student at the nearby East Valley Institute of Technology, was able to run across the street to emergency responders at the motel, Flores said. Seven students and an instructor were working at Bistro 13 restaurant. Martinez has been treated at a hospital and released.

The gunman got away from the restaurant by carjacking the school instructor's car.

Police say the man then went to an apartment complex about 2 miles away, where he went into an apartment and shot Donavon Worker, 24. Worker is expected to survive, police said.

A police officer then found Marcus Butler, 25, in a neighboring apartment building with multiple gunshot wounds. Flores said Butler was in critical but stable condition Thursday and is expected to recover.

The shootings set off an intense hunt for the gunman. Mesa police searched the trunks of cars and brought in SWAT and canine units from other agencies.

Giroux served prison terms totaling more than eight years for burglary, theft, attempted aggravated assault and a marijuana violation, according to an Arizona Department of Corrections profile.

He was first incarcerated in 1994 and returned to prison in late 1995 before being released about a year later. He then returned to prison in mid-2007 after a run-in with police outside a Mesa convenience store.

According to court documents, Giroux shoplifted a bag of potato chips in December 2006, resisted arrest once outside the business and started to fight with two responding police officers. The officers said Giroux reached for a gun in his waistband. Giroux denied reaching for his gun and claimed officers beat him.

At his 2007 sentencing, he was a divorced father with a GED and a certification in fighting wildfires. He also was using cocaine, heroin, LSD and methamphetamines off and on for the past 20 years, according to court records. He sought substance abuse treatment but never finished.

Giroux was released in late 2013. Last year, a Maricopa County Superior Court judge allowed Giroux to remain on probation despite an unspecified probation violation.
 
not interested so much as angry 
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What was the reason for him shooting people randomly? To be blissfully honest I really only see white people running around shooting and killing people

Yeah brah people of other races have done this too. I was in HS during the DC sniper days :smh:

I haven't seen any statistics that point to the number being disproportionately white. Could be, but not something I have researched.

But same way I wouldn't want black folk labeled when a small group commits a crime, it is not fair to label white peoples this way.

The important questions, what were caused this, and what steps can we take so this doesn't happen again

For example if dude is nuts, we need to look at the state of mental healthcare, or school bullying. But in some cases there is not rhyme or reason

Not cornballin on some "not all white peoples is bad" steez, just saying, lets first get the facts
B

Shut the hell up Rusty :smh: :lol:
 
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This dude shot how many people and they managed to take him down with a stun gun?

That's what I don't understand.









Ok I understand... But I wish i didn't.
 
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The field would make sure police go to the lengths of the Earth to carefully and systematically take down large 300 lb wild animals but when it comes to chasing down "criminals" -- use deadly force if necessary

Would be nice if it were only when necessary but watever, it's okay we've already been over this...
 
Well look at that, a guy who clearly wanted a bunch of people dead simply gets subdued and gets to live through his decisions. Must be nice. I guess those recent elementary age girls who were killed by the police did something much worse.
 
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