Posted by adminSeptember 14, 2011, 11:16 am
Rumors persist in IHOP investigation
 
 
September, 13 2011 8:46 am
 
CARSON CITY, Nev. — A week after the IHOP shooting, investigators continue to piece together the last 72 hours of Eduardo Sencion's life in an effort to figure out what precipitated the Carson City man's deadly rampage that ended in five deaths, including his own, and seven injuries.

In the interim, the rumor mill has been busy at work, spreading claims that Sencion had an ex-girlfriend at the South Carson City restaurant; that he tried to go into two other businesses before choosing the IHOP; or that he had been contacted by police at a North Carson City restaurant six hours before the shootings after threatening to harm himself and others, and that police dropped the ball.

Sheriff's dispatch logs and reports indicate what Sheriff Ken Furlong affirms: None of those rumors is true.

“The tsunami is gone,” Furlong said. “Now I'm just fighting waves of misinformation.”

According to the Carson City sheriff's dispatch logs and a report, police were called to Denny's restaurant at 3:12 a.m. on Sept. 6 after a man despondent over medical problems and the dissolution of his marriage made statements that he was going to kill himself. That 39-year-old father of four, who was intoxicated, spoke with deputies, assured them he would not harm himself and eventually was driven home in a taxi.

Though that man had black hair like Sencion, he stands 6 feet 2 inches tall. Sencion stood 5 feet 5 inches tall.

The man at Denny's is unharmed and alive.

“Every one of the sightings that has been called in has been assigned to someone to run down,” Furlong said. “There have been dozens of reports of sightings of the shooter all over town, and investigators have tracked down that information and backed it up with known factual data. We have looked at (the Denny's case) over and over, and it does not match.”

Furlong said investigators have also been able to rule out that Sencion attempted to first go into a Jack in the Box, although they have confirmed that he went to a Jack in the Box drive-through the previous evening.

They've also ruled out a suggestion that Sencion had sold someone cigarettes at his family's South Lake Tahoe market on the morning of the shootings.

“We have no information that suggests he was up in Tahoe that morning. We have credible information he was here in town at 6:50 a.m.,” said Furlong.

There's also no truth to the rumors that Sencion was involved in a love triangle with an IHOP employee, the sheriff said. The only connection to the restaurant, said Furlong, is that he and his family ate their frequently.

And Sencion was not a member of the Nevada National Guard — and nothing indicates he ever tried to join the military.

“What we have learned is he never expressed any animosity toward the military,” said Furlong.

Furlong said that for every rumor that officers are dispelling, they are slowly creeping toward a complete timeline of Sencion's movements in the hours before his deadly spree.

And while so much is still unknown, Furlong is adamant about one rumor that seems to really have legs.

“We had no contact with Eduardo Sencion prior to the incident,” he said.

Posted by adminSeptember 13, 2011, 11:50 am

Suspect killed, officer wounded in shooting at local Walmart

By Mike Blasky
LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL

Posted: Sep. 9, 2011 | 6:34 a.m.
Updated: Sep. 9, 2011 | 8:58 a.m.

A man was killed and an officer was injured Friday morning in a police shooting at a Walmart.

The incident happened after officers responded to a 911 call about 4:30 a.m. at a Walmart at 3615 S. Rainbow Blvd., near Spring Mountain Road.

Las Vegas police homicide Lt. Lew Roberts said patrol officers were investigating a suspicious couple trying to make a large purchase with a fraudulent bank card.

Three or four officers confronted the couple and attempted to take them into custody when the man pulled a handgun from his waistband and began firing, Roberts said.

One officer was struck in his chest and arm. The officer was wearing a vest and received non-life threatening injuries, police said.

Roberts said it was not immediately clear how many officers returned fire, but the man was shot and later died at University Medical Center.

Sheriff Doug Gillespie said he visited the officer at UMC that morning and viewed the severe bruise where the bullet struck the vest.

"Thank god he was wearing a bulletproof vest," Gillespie said. "This should be a reminder to us all that policing is a dangerous job."

Roberts said the female suspect had been arrested, but the charges were not immediately known.

Outside the Walmart after the shooting, several dozen store employees and customers huddled together in a taped-off area, waiting for police.

One customer, David, told the Review-Journal he saw the couple talking with officers immediately before the shooting. Several moments later, he heard several rapid-fire shots and fled the store.

He described the couple as being in their mid-20s or early 30s. He didn't sense any tension between the suspects and police before the shooting began.

"If it had been more interesting, I would have stayed and watched," said David, who declined to give his last name. "I was trying to buy dog treats and was looking at some magazines."

Other employees and customers huddled inside the crime tape declined to comment.

Roberts said the investigation would take most of the day because of the large area and the number of witnesses to be interviewed.

"This is a large, dynamic scene," he said. "The investigation is very preliminary and there are certain things I can't answer right now because I don't know."

Contact reporter Mike Blasky at mblasky@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0283