Los Angeles, CA - Suspect Steals L.A. Co. Sheriff's Squad Car - High Speed Chase - Suspect Shot By Police
Driver of stolen L.A. squad car shot in
Nestor
UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER
7:36 p.m. December 25, 2007
Investigators huddle at scene of Tuesday morning shooting of auto-theft
suspect on southbound Interstate 5 near Palm Avenue.
A man driving a stolen sheriff's squad car from Los Angeles County was shot by
police in the San Diego community of Nestor on Christmas morning after reaching
for a shotgun inside the cruiser, authorities said.
The shooting happened shortly after 9 a.m. on Interstate 5 near Palm Avenue.
Regino Aguilar, 26, was taken under guard to a local hospital with injuries
described as not life threatening, San Diego police Lt. Kevin Rooney said.
Aguilar was facing arrest on suspicion of auto theft, felony evading arrest and
assault.
Aguilar is accused of stealing a parked, black-and-white patrol car about 7
a.m. on Compton Avenue in south Los Angeles County, a Los Angeles Sheriff's
spokesman said.
Shortly after 8:30 a.m., someone called police to report seeing the vehicle at a
gas station in Leucadia. All local officers were alerted because the stolen
car was equipped with ammunition and a shotgun, Rooney said.
Shortly before 9 a.m., another caller saw the patrol car parked in a lot on Palm
Avenue in Otay Mesa, just west of interstate 805.
The California Highway Patrol responded to the call and an officer pulled up
next to the stolen car. The driver, however, jumped back inside and sped off,
Rooney said.
The man led officers in four police cars – two from San Diego Police and two
from the CHP – on a chase that ended when he pulled over on the southbound side
of the Interstate 5 median.
The man first opened the door and stepped outside the car. But when he got
back in and began tugging at the shotgun secured between the front seats, two
officers fired at him, Rooney said.
The San Diego Police officer who opened fire has been with the department for 2½
years, Rooney said. The CHP officer who opened fire has been with the agency
for 9½ years.
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