Aurora woman accused of shooting 2 ordered held for trial

February 20th, 2010  |  Published in The Denver Post

BRIGHTON, Colo. — An Adams County District Court judge ruled Friday that prosecutors have sufficient evidence to try Cristina Wanda Sears in the shooting death of her stepmother and the serious wounding of her stepsister just days before Christmas.

In an emotional hearing that lasted more than three hours, prosecutors called several witnesses, including Sears’ son, Kenneth R. Richey, who testified in poignant detail about how the circumstances — the loss of Sears’ job, the recent death of her father, severe depression, and suicidal thoughts combined with a years-long dispute about her father’s estate — drove her to the deadly confrontation on Dec. 22.

Richey forced back tears as he recounted how he, his then-fiance Shanyndoah Bowen, and Joy Pigon, then 49, the stepsister, were posing for pre-wedding photos and preparing gifts around 3:30 p.m. in their Aurora home when they heard a loud pop from the kitchen next door.

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Christmas murder in Aurora family stemmed from disputed estate

January 21st, 2010  |  Published in The Denver Post

AURORA, Colo. — It was an early afternoon several days before Christmas. Cristina Wanda Sears met her 22-year-old son at the Frontier Club to down several drinks.

When they finished, Sears drove her son, Josh, to an appointment with his probation officer. When she dropped him off, Josh spotted a black handgun tucked in her purse.

Then, a short time later, he received a phone call.

“I did something bad,” Sears, 44, informed him, according to testimony in an affidavit from the Aurora Police Department.

They agreed to meet at the Sand Creek Lounge, a 15-minute drive away from the home where police say Sears had just gunned down her 75-year-old stepmother, Eleanor J. Sears, and seriously wounded her 49-year-old stepsister, Joy L. Pigon, over a years-long dispute about the estate of Cristina Sears’ late father.

Officers arrested Cristina Sears at the Lounge shortly before 5 p.m., although it was unclear whether her son was with her.

Cristina Sears — who has no prior arrest record, according to the Colorado Bureau of Investigation — is being held without bond at the Adams County Jail after the Dec. 22 incident, charged with 11 criminal counts, including first-degree murder, first-degree attempted murder and first-degree assault.

She was scheduled to appear at 9 a.m. today for a preliminary hearing, but it was postponed until Feb. 21 at the request of her public defender, Stefanie Gaffigan, who declined to comment on the case. Cristina Sears has refused an interview request through a jail deputy.

The afternoon of Dec. 22, Cristina Sears’ other son, Kenneth R. Richey, his fiancee, Shannon L. Bowen, and Pigon were in a room next to the kitchen when Richey said he heard a “pop,” according to the affidavit.

Aurora emergency dispatchers received an initial call around 3:30 p.m. reporting an armed person inside Eleanor Sears’ home. Then, another emergency call came: two people had been shot.

Two officers arrived to find Eleanor Sears and her daughter in their kitchen suffering from multiple gunshot wounds, the affidavit said. Richey, who told police that he witnessed the shootings, saw Cristina Sears empty the rest of the gun’s clip at a TV, place the gun on the floor near the front door, and flee.

Both victims were rushed to the University of Colorado hospital, where a doctor pronounced Eleanor Sears dead about an hour after the original emergency call. Multiple attempts to ascertain the current condition of Pigon were unsuccessful.

Two children — ages 3 and 6 — were also inside the home at the time, but in a separate room and not harmed physically. In a news release, police said the children were under the care of one of the victims, a statement consistent with neighbors’ accounts that Eleanor Sears and Pigon often cared for the children of families they were close to. Police declined to say to whom the two children belonged.

Five people — Richey, Bowen, Eleanor Sears, Pigon, and Pigon’s husband, David — shared the home.

The shootings were the violent conclusion to an acrimonious dispute years in the making, according to Richey’s account in the affidavit. Cristina Sears’ apparent hatred for Eleanor Sears stemmed from her belief that Eleanor had not given her “what she was entitled to” after Cristina’s father died.

Efforts to contact Richey and Josh Sears, Cristina Sears’ son, were not successful. A phone number listed for Eleanor Sears’ home in Aurora was disconnected.

On a recent evening, Christmas decorations still sat in the small front yard of the now-darkened two-story home. A four-foot plastic snowman flashed brightly — on one second, off the next — and cold, blue holiday lights lined a window frame, under which sat the statue of angel, her hands and face angled toward the sky. Knocks on the front door went unanswered.

Neighbors recalled Eleanor Sears as an exceptionally caring and kind woman, who treated neighborhood kids just as her own. During Christmas, Sears and Pigon would hand-craft stockings, blankets and scarves for friends and neighbors.

“Joy’s name fits her perfectly,” said Judy Churchill, 69, a neighbor across the street. “She has the joy of the Lord in her, and her mom’s the same way.

“They were right there for me (when I first moved here). It’s just totally unbelievable. These two people didn’t deserve this.”

This article appeared only in the online version of The Denver Post.

Westminster deputy police chief, senior officer shot, 2 bank robbers dead

November 19th, 2009  |  Published in The Denver Post

By HOWARD PANKRATZ, KIRK MITCHELL, JEREMY P. MEYER, MONTE WHALEY and DANIEL PETTY

WESTMINSTER, Colo. — Both suspects in the robbery of a Westminster bank are dead and two police officers including the deputy chief were injured following a chase and shootout, authorities say.

Officer Sean Chandler, who joined the department in 1998, was shot in the hip and hospitalized at St. Anthony Central hospital in stable condition, Westminster police spokesman Trevor Materasso said.

A bullet grazed the hip of Deputy Police Chief Tim Carlson, who joined the police department in 1987. He was treated at the scene and not hospitalized, Materasso said.

Both suspects were shot in their car. The male suspect was killed during the shootout. The wounded female suspect was taken to St. Anthony Central hospital where she later died, Materasso said. He said both were young adults.

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La Familia arrests include 6 on Western Slope

October 23rd, 2009  |  Published in The Denver Post

DENVER — Six people living on the Western Slope who are suspected associates or members of La Familia have been arrested as part of the orchestrated drug raids nationwide, authorities said Thursday.

Three others thought to be connected to La Familia were arrested Tuesday night on state drug charges, but authorities expect to file federal charges in the coming days, said Jeff Dorsch ner, a spokesman for the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Colorado.

On July 23, a federal grand jury in Denver on July 23 indicted 11 suspects on charges of conspiracy, possession with intent to distribute and distribution of cocaine, a statement by U.S. Attorney David Gaouette and special agent Jeffrey Sweetin of the Drug Enforcement Administration said.

Four suspects were arrested in July, and two more in September, while five more remain at large. The three arrested Tuesday are not part of the July indictment.

The suspects are being held in pre-trial detention, and a trial date has not been set.

The six arrestees are Martin Pimintel, 45, and Rosalie Aide Quijada, 27, both of Tucson, Ariz.; Tiburcio Delgadillo-Martinez, 33, Salvador Delgadillo-Alvarez, 29, and Jorge Rosales-Acevedo, 28, all of New Castle; and Justin Skipski, 28, of Rifle.

Authorities did not name the three arrested on Tuesday. Those still at large are Emanuel Pimintel, 19, of Tucson; Daniel Velasz quez-Guerrero, 36, of Pontiac, Mich.; and Salvador Vera-Figueroa, 37, Lucio Topete-Hernandez, 49, and Araceli Topete, all of Mexico.

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High-speed chase ends in crash near 16th Street Mall

September 28th, 2009  |  Published in The Denver Post

DENVER — A high-speed chase through downtown Denver early Sunday morning ended when the driver of the fleeing vehicle wrapped it around a traffic signal pole, sending the four people in the car to the hospital, authorities say.

A Denver police officer saw the four people get into an altercation with another individual on Lawrence Street downtown.

One of the four allegedly drew a weapon, possibly a handgun, before the group got into the car, said Lt. Scott M. Kaye, commander of the Denver Police Department’s traffic investigations unit.

“An armed person who displays a weapon at other people meets the criteria for pursuit,” Kaye said, speaking from the scene.

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Nightmare for sleeping child in Douglas County

July 11th, 2009  |  Published in The Denver Post

DOUGLAS COUNTY, Colo. — The Sheriff’s Office is looking for a burglar who entered the second-story window of a Stonegate home and apparently fondled an 8-year-old girl as she slept.

The girl’s father said he was showering around 5 a.m. Friday before leaving for work, when his daughter burst into the bathroom, panicked and scared, saying a strange man had just fled her room.

He said he jumped from the shower, yelled for his wife to call police and headed into his daughter’s bedroom, expecting to confront the man, but instead found her window screen cast onto the roof at the foot of her window. Investigators later found the screen had been sliced, he said.

The girl said she was awakened by an unknown male who was touching her inappropriately, the Sheriff’s Office said in a statement. She described him as a white male with brown hair and weighing about 140 to 180 pounds.

“We do believe that an unknown person entered the house through an open window and fondled this girl,” said Cocha Heyden, a spokeswoman for the Sheriff’s Office.

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Denver fireworks violations nearly halved

July 9th, 2009  |  Published in The Denver Post

DENVER — Denver’s police and fire departments reported that fireworks citations and seizures dropped by nearly half this Fourth of July weekend, compared with last year.

Police issued 34 citations and made 123 fireworks confiscations this year, said Sonny Jackson, spokesman for the Denver Police Department. That’s down from the 56 citations and 225 seizures in 2008.

Even during the days leading up to the holiday — not just on the Fourth — Jackson said complaints and reports were down by about half.

Authorities couldn’t peg the declines on a specific initiative or reason, but Jackson credited his agency’s continued fireworks-safety education and enforcement for playing a part, even though this year’s campaign was less extensive than in years past.

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