Appomattox, Virginia Shooting: Family Killed In Crossfire After Sleepover Drop-Off

DENA POTTER   01/22/10 07:18 PM ET   AP

Christopher Speight

APPOMATTOX, Va. — There was no school the next day, so 15-year-old Emily Quarles had a friend sleep over. As she and her mother took the friend home the next morning, they became targets for a rampaging gunman. When Emily's father and boyfriend went looking for them, they were slain too.

Police say Emily and her parents, Jonathan and Karen Quarles, and her boyfriend, 16-year-old Ronnie "Bo" Scruggs, were among eight people killed early Tuesday by 39-year-old Christopher Speight. He's accused of firing on a police helicopter and hiding in the woods before surrendering nearly a day later. Speight is the uncle of Morgan Dobyns, the friend the Quarles were dropping off, who was also killed.

An inventory obtained Friday of the items found through search warrants showed that investigators seized 42 homemade explosive devices and fuses, multiple rounds of ammunition, several assault rifles and a 9 mm pistol from the Appomattox home Speight shared with his sister, brother-in-law and their two children. The four were among Tuesday's victims.

Speight is being held without bond on a single murder charge and told a judge at a brief court appearance Friday that he has enough money to get his own lawyer. More charges are expected.

Police have not provided a timeline for the killings, which happened at the home Speight shared with his sister and her family. Melissa Stallard, Jonathan Quarles' sister, gave the following outline to the Richmond Times-Dispatch based on information police gave her:

_ Karen Quarles and Dobyns, 15, were found dead on the porch and Emily Quarles was found dead in the car. It wasn't clear why she was not on the porch with the other two.

_ Jonathan Quarles got worried when Karen and Emily didn't return, so he and Scruggs, who had been dropped off to hang out with Emily, went looking for them. Stallard said officials told her they would have seen Karen and Morgan's bodies on the porch when they arrived. Scruggs got out of the car and was shot beside it. Jonathan Quarles tried to run but was also shot. A sheriff's deputy found him wounded in the torso and barely alive. He died at the hospital.

_ The other three people killed were Speight's sister, Lauralee Sipe, and her husband and 4-year-old son. Dobyns was her daughter from a previous marriage. Police have said three bodies were found in the house, though they have not confirmed those bodies were the Sipes.

Police have not released a motive, though friends say Speight may have thought Lauralee Sipe was trying to kick him out of the house. Deputies who arrived after the killings found one explosive booby trap, according to search warrants released Friday.

Mike Campbell, spokesman for the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, said that the number of guns found at the house wasn't unusual but the inventory of explosives was.

"These explosives could have done a lot of damage and could have killed people," Campbell said.

Relatives and people who knew Speight say he had a history of mental breakdowns and may have become fixated on the notion that his sister wanted to oust him from the house passed down to them by their grandparents and mother. The family lawyer, however, said her intention was the opposite: She planned to deed the property solely to him.

Speight said nothing at the court hearing Friday morning, and an arraignment has not been scheduled.

Speight had struggled since his mother died from brain cancer in 2006, said uncle Thomas Giglio. Speight's father left some 30 years ago, and he and his mother were very close.

"He didn't take it good at all," Giglio said. "I don't think he ever reconciled it."

Lynchburg attorney Harry Devening, who handled legal matters for the family, said Speight had an apparent learning disability and history of mental problems, and "ran away" from his sister's Georgia home for several days during a breakdown in 2007, about a year after his mother died.

Even then the family had no reason to suspect Speight might turn violent.

Devening said Lauralee Sipe perceived no problems either, signing a deed late last week to put the family property in Speight's name. She planned to record it at the courthouse immediately, he said, but both Friday and Monday were state holidays.

The lawyer cautioned her that she was giving up her half of the property.

"She said he was fine, he was normal, and she wasn't concerned about it," Devening said. As for her share, "it was never of any consequence to her. She was very happy with the arrangement."

___

Associated Press writers Vicki Smith and Larry O'Dell in Appomattox and Harry Weber in Atlanta contributed to this report.

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APPOMATTOX, Va. — There was no school the next day, so 15-year-old Emily Quarles had a friend sleep over. As she and her mother took the friend home the next morning, they became targets for a r...
APPOMATTOX, Va. — There was no school the next day, so 15-year-old Emily Quarles had a friend sleep over. As she and her mother took the friend home the next morning, they became targets for a r...
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11:24 PM on 03/10/2010
There's a problem with the headline. A crossfire requires that someone else is shooting, too. Caught "in [a] crossfire" usually indicates that the victims were not the intended targets.

I hate it when people who don't know the subject matter write stories about it.

ECS
05:28 PM on 01/25/2010
What makes VA special is the fact a mentally disturbed NRA member, Chris Speight, could receive four (4) CCW permit approvals despit having received mental health treatment.
06:33 PM on 01/25/2010
Jade/Lynn Oge has also claimed that you can make a gun into a machinegun by filing down the firing pin.

What kind of person would take ANY of his claims seriously.
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OdinsEye
Korean-Latino cop and combat vet
03:15 AM on 01/24/2010
greatblue

I tell you what, I'll help you out a little here.

First, some definitions.

Dealer: A federal firearm licensed (FFL holder) vendor.

Private seller: A non-FFL holder.

Sales at gun shows: Dealers have to do background checks, private sellers do not.

Sales anywhere else: Dealers have to do background checks, private sellers do not.

IOW, there is no loop hole in the firearm laws exempting sales at gun shows from any requirements. Selling at a gun show does not circu.mvent any laws which would apply elsewhere.

Now, if you want an example of a loophole: Dealers keep a record of their incoming and outgoing firearm transfers, usually in something called a "bound book". If a firearm is transfered in to there bound book and remains there for a year, a dealer can transfer it out of the bound book to themself, just as if it were a person sale. The dealer can then sell the firearm as a private seller. Classic loophole.
03:35 PM on 01/24/2010
Thank you for finally admitting the truth. An adjudicated mentally ill person can buy a gun at a gun show in Virginia. They do not need to go through a background check, which would show their, um, background.
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OdinsEye
Korean-Latino cop and combat vet
03:45 PM on 01/24/2010
I never said they could not. I specifically said they could also get one from a garage sale, a friend, a classified "want ad", etc. Go back and read.

What I am arguing with you about is the existance of a "gun show loop hole" as there is no exemption from from firearm laws or laws which do not apply at gun shows.
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OdinsEye
Korean-Latino cop and combat vet
03:55 PM on 01/24/2010
BTW, a requiring background checks at gun shows? Would not have stopped CHo, who did not buy his firearms from gun shows, or Speight, who would have passed the background check just as he repassed one for his CCW renewal.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
OLMEQ
Pay Attention, You can't afford Free Speech...
06:08 PM on 01/23/2010
this hillbilly started at home before becoming a problem to the general public. Let is monkey a** of the farm and the rest of the world will have to deal with his silliness.... Keep your guns and I will keep mine.... Just so that all these clowns know... Some of us will shoot back....
06:01 PM on 01/23/2010
It's all fun and games, until it's not. . .
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MountPanic
05:42 PM on 01/23/2010
Aw... you guys!

He obviously would have done the same thing, even if all he could buy was a knife.

Sheesh!
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OdinsEye
Korean-Latino cop and combat vet
05:46 PM on 01/23/2010
Did you skip the part about all the explosives he had?
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ZimboChick
Stanning for Hopey all day, everyday
06:10 PM on 01/23/2010
"These expl os ives could have done a lot of damage and could have ki l l e d people," Campbell said.

well duh!

This whole "It's my right to own a gu n" is st u p i d to say the least
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
RevJimIII
Open Carry Oklahoma!!
06:22 PM on 01/23/2010
My enumerated right to self defense is not stupid.
04:40 PM on 01/23/2010
To all you guys who answered my post regarding living in NY and asking an off-duty cop if i should arm myself after my husband died----------.

Just to let you know that this story is from thirty (30) years ago and - after receiving this advice I HAVE NEVER OWNED A FIREARM ---------- but I HAVE travelled this country for months at a time - alone on a motorcycle (twice) and in an auto (twice) - from end to end and zig-zagged through all the states where people seem to think that owning a firearm is their ONLY protection.

I guess firearms really are NOT a necessity and I REFUSE to give in the paranoia that lives on in this country.
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OdinsEye
Korean-Latino cop and combat vet
04:47 PM on 01/23/2010
For many they are not a necessity. For others they certainly can be. There have been numerous studies try ing to determine the number of successful defensive firearm uses in this country. Of the 15+ studies that I know of, conducted by news agencies, the government, universities, independent researchers, polling organizations, and even a couple vehement gun controllers, the estimates range from about 100,000 instances per year to over 2 million instances per year.
05:49 PM on 01/23/2010
Sorry Cambridge, I've owned a handgun since I was 18. Though I lived by myself all my life, it's not for reasons of paranoia. I LOVE to shoot. I love going to the range and testing my accuracy. and it's also my right to do so. I don't walk around with a gun on my hip every day. I don't threaten people if I get angry. I don't live in a bad neighborhood so I doubt I'll ever have to use it. I have no children or other people around me, so the only person who has access to it is me ... You should stop generalizing about gun owners. While there are many who are paranoid freaks, many are not.
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ZimboChick
Stanning for Hopey all day, everyday
06:12 PM on 01/23/2010
ait till its used on u...in your good neighbourhood...smh
06:21 PM on 01/23/2010
It's a shame none of them could make it to this thread.
04:35 PM on 01/23/2010
If firearms ownership was restricted to those with IQs of 140 and above, no members of the NRA, no hunters, no members of any unofficial "militia," no "teabaggers" and virtually no Republicans would be able to own a firearm.
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OdinsEye
Korean-Latino cop and combat vet
04:47 PM on 01/23/2010
More hatred and bigotry.
05:16 PM on 01/23/2010
Hatred and bigotry are all that people like lalaboy have got
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robadeaux
Your labels have expired....
05:24 PM on 01/23/2010
Sorry, the lowest IQ score I've ever received was 146... and though I am not a member of the NRA, I have been a hunter (and outfitter and guide in Alaska) and I do own guns. Most people with an IQ over 100 wouldn't make such a narrow minded statement.
03:34 PM on 01/23/2010
Mental illness and guns don't make for a good mix.
04:13 PM on 01/23/2010
Why would ANYONE need that many guns UNLESS they planned to hunt humans?



NOBODY needs that much firepower unless they are in the military.

Americans are sickos.
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OdinsEye
Korean-Latino cop and combat vet
04:50 PM on 01/23/2010
How many is too many? One shotgun for duck, another for geese, one for upland game birds, and anoth for turkeys, and a shotgun for skeet, a rifle for deer and elk, another for varmints, a benchrest rifle, a plinking rifle, -- what are we at, nine so far?
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kathy001
Don't bogart that duck
05:36 PM on 01/23/2010
You might just as well as why anyone would need more than two pairs of shoes. I feel the need to own dozens of pairs of shoes. Some people feel the need to own lots of guns. Very few of the people who own a large number of guns ever even point a gun at another human, much less shoot one.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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dems08
2012: 60 US Senators / 218 House Seats
02:29 PM on 01/23/2010
... investigators seized... multiple rounds of ammunition, several assault rifles and a 9 mm pistol from the Appomattox home...

Mike Campbell, spokesman for the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, said that the number of guns found at the house wasn't unusual...

the country is screwed!
02:40 PM on 01/23/2010
What I do find unusual is the fact this man killed 8 people, shot at the helicopter several times and is still using precious oxygen. Why do our law enforcement officers even carry firearms if they are not going to use them. However I do believe if it had been 8 police officers found shot this individual would not have lived to turn himself in that morning. No life is more valuable than another.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hulagirrrl
03:30 PM on 01/23/2010
Maybe these were policemen who still respect the law. Not like the ones who shoot, beat up and mistreat people on the spot.
04:17 PM on 01/23/2010
Why don't we just turn this country into a military controlled 3rd world country?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Michele Himmel
01:01 PM on 01/23/2010
All of this ranting about guns and the NRA. It is the person holding the gun that is responsible and in this case it was a mentally ill person. As far as going on about him being able to purchase guns, could have been his sisters guns. Then what? No one with a menatlly ill relative can own guns? Get real.
01:51 PM on 01/23/2010
I am impressed--a rational post here on Hufffpe
02:31 PM on 01/23/2010
I really doubt that the sister owned several assault rifles, a 9mm pistol and 42 homemade explosives. But you would probably argue if he didn't have a gun he probably would have killed 7 people with a knife or a blunt object.
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OdinsEye
Korean-Latino cop and combat vet
02:43 PM on 01/23/2010
Well, for one it is highly unlikely that anyone in the house had any assault rifles. The press routinely misuses that word.

And had any of the many bombs gone off, things could have been every bit as bad if not worse.
02:46 PM on 01/23/2010
That's right. If explosives were illegal, he wouldn't have them.
01:01 PM on 01/23/2010
I'm going to repeat a story here --------------

After my husband died many years ago while I was living in New York state, I asked an off duty law-enforcement officer if I should buy a gun for self protection. My question was that ---- "If an uninvited someone entered my house with the intent of harming me so that he/she could then steal whatever he/she wanted, would it be to my advantage to have a firearm to protect myself?"

The answer I received went something like this. If an intruder enters your house and you use a weapon against that intruder - and killed him/her, you could face murder charges; but if you only wounded that person you could face aggravated assault - even in your own home. ONLY after you have been assaulted do you have the right to attack the 'assaulter'.

Well, if that 'assaulter' had already killed, raped or seriously hurt me - it would be a bit late. Sooo, even though I have known, for years, how to use both rifles and handguns, I decided that i was to be the 'victim' either way. I chose NOT to buy a weapon.
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Aranxa
01:06 PM on 01/23/2010
Maybe in NY, but in Texas you kill someone on your lawn they give you a medal and buy you a beer.
HDR
In every dreamhome, a heartache
01:13 PM on 01/23/2010
Unless race is involved. You still get the medal and the beer but only after a couple of groups harass your neighbors w/ protests.
04:15 PM on 01/23/2010
Same here in Tennessee. They even give you a free confederate flag.
01:11 PM on 01/23/2010
The law varies by state. In Connecticut self defense is a valid defense at trial. Here, your stated scenario is not correct. If you believed that you or your family were in serious harm's way, deadly force would be justified. The difficulty at trial is that a jurist has to place himself in your position to determine whether you could reasonably have that belief. That the person illegally entering your home is a criminal is not enough for a defense, unfortunately. In contrast, Texas has even less stringent laws regarding the use of deadly force. If you recall, a man shot two robbers in the back as they fled recently, and he was not found guilty. I'll post a link to "castle law" for people to find out about other differences between states.

http://www.cga.ct.gov/2007/rpt/2007-R-0052.htm
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OliverTwist
Contrarian advocate for truth and justice
03:30 PM on 01/23/2010
"If you recall, a man shot two robbers in the back as they fled recently, and he was not found guilty."

He was not even indicted.

More interesting is that plain clothes police had reached the scene before the shooting(in response to the shooter's 911 call and statement over the phone of his intent to kill these people) but had not revealed or declared themselves. My guess is the police were waiting for the killing.

"The 911 call came from a Pasadena, Tex., resident, who alerted police to two burglary suspects on a neighbor's property. Before he hung up, two men were dead by his hand.

Joe Horn, 61, told the dispatcher what he intended to do: Walk out his front door with a shotgun.

"I've got a shotgun," Horn said, according to a tape of the 911 call. "Do you want me to stop them?"

"Nope, don't do that - ain't no property worth shooting somebody over, OK?" the dispatcher responded.

"Hurry up man, catch these guys, will you? 'Cause I'm ain't gonna let 'em go, I'm gonna be honest with you, I'm not gonna let 'em go. I'm not gonna let 'em get away with this ----.""

He shot them in the back and killed them both while the police stood by and watched.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BigSlick674
Mitochondr­ial DNA has no expiration date
04:04 PM on 01/23/2010
Here's a great case example of how guns and poor decisions can ruin everybody's lives.

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/2311263/posts

Even the Freepers have enough common sense to see how wrong this situations was.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
myj66
12:39 PM on 01/23/2010
unfortunately, privacy laws protect this guy from having his mental health issues known to the public; consequently allowing him to purchase weapons. perhaps his sister could have sought some kind of legal protection prior; I'm sure he had probably threatened them.

legislators have got to come up with a better way to protect citizens from people w/mental health problems while preserving some of their rights to privacy.
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OdinsEye
Korean-Latino cop and combat vet
12:49 PM on 01/23/2010
All they have to do is go to a judge and have him adjudicated as mentally deficeint/ a danger to himself or others. That becomes public record. Regardless of what doctors say about a person, it actually requires a legal ruling from a judge to deny a person their right to arms.
03:12 PM on 01/23/2010
Right, but in Virginia he could still buy a gun at a gun show.
12:07 PM on 01/23/2010
Hooray for the NRA!
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OdinsEye
Korean-Latino cop and combat vet
12:26 PM on 01/23/2010
What did the NRA do?
HDR
In every dreamhome, a heartache
12:34 PM on 01/23/2010
Exactly! What did they do? Nothing except to reason that if every single one of these victims had been armed, this might not have happened. How about mandatory gun safety classes starting w/ toddlers. Essentially making firearms an extension of the human body. Institutionalize those who oppose or cannot properly operate one.

That'll learn them psychosociopaths before they go off on their insanity-driven sprees! BTW, as punishment, he should have his membership to the NRA revoked.
11:42 AM on 01/23/2010
So the gunsters will tell us that if everyone, including the sleepover girls, had been properly armed that they could have taken this guy out before all this mayhem reached its horrific conclusion? Is that the lesson we need to draw here, as we always do, that we need yet more guns in this country?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
motoGpifupleez
watching with amusement
11:44 AM on 01/23/2010
Because that strategy worked so well in a Tacoma, Washington coffee shop.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
0u812
11:45 AM on 01/23/2010
Link to story please?
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OdinsEye
Korean-Latino cop and combat vet
12:27 PM on 01/23/2010
We will tell you that had he ever been evaluated for his aberrant behavior and adjudicated as being a danger, then none of this would have happened.
03:13 PM on 01/23/2010
unless he bought a gun at a gun show. Also, in Virginia nobody comes looking for the guns these guys already have.