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Stanislaus County Deputy Killed While Trying To Serve Eviction Notice

Modesto Eviction Shooting

TRACIE CONE   04/13/12 11:45 PM ET  AP

MODESTO, Calif. — The body of a man suspected of gunning down a deputy and a locksmith when they tried to serve eviction papers was discovered Friday in the rubble of an apartment that was gutted by fire during a standoff with authorities.

Police said it could take weeks to identify the charred remains found after the blaze collapsed the second floor of the structure.

Property records show James Ferrario, 45, lived at the address in the Whispering Woods development.

Jonathon Mullinix, 20, a neighbor, said Ferrario was reserved and often kept to himself.

He had told Mullinix he worked for a private security company and had handguns, rifles and shotguns. Mullinix said Ferrario also had several security cameras in windows of his house.

"He seemed like someone who wanted to be left alone," Mullinix said.

State online records show Ferrario's security guard registration and firearms permit were canceled in 2009 with no disciplinary action indicated.

The Modesto Bee newspaper said the Ferrario property had fallen behind on payments on a $15,000 Bank of America mortgage taken out in 2003. The property owner also appears to have defaulted on $13,406 owed to the Whispering Woods Community Association.

The association foreclosed on the condo last year, followed by a bank foreclosure in December, the newspaper reported.

R&T Financial Inc. is now the property's legal owner, according to county records. The Associated Press could not find a phone listing for the company.

After getting clearance from fire officials, federal firearms and explosives agents spent Friday afternoon searching the rubble for evidence in the case. Police spokesman Officer Chris Adams would not say if any weapons had been found.

The daylong standoff began Thursday morning after a man opened fire as authorities tried to serve the eviction notice.

At one point during the standoff, police broke the windows of the apartment with bean bag shots and fired flash-bang grenades and tear gas. Authorities evacuated nearby residents in the development of freestanding buildings, each divided into four apartments.

Around 9 p.m., six officers rushed toward the apartment, the Bee reported. Sharp bangs from concussive devices were heard for more than an hour, and officers used loudspeakers to communicate with the man to pick up the phone. No one came out.

As police shot the flash-bang grenades, they could see the apartment lights being turned on and off, confirming someone was inside, Adams said.

It was not clear how the fire, which officers reported at 9:45 p.m., began, but the Bee reported the sheriff has acknowledged flash-bang devices and tear gas could have been responsible. Four apartments were destroyed by the fire, and 100 units were evacuated after the shooting.

Officials identified the deputy killed as Robert Paris, 53, and the civilian as Glendon David Engert, 35, a locksmith from Modesto.

Paris, a 16-year veteran of the department, is survived by his parents, a brother and two adult children.

Bob Wilson, 85, a neighbor who lives two doors down from Engert, said there had been a procession of people around the locksmith's house since the shooting.

"I've seen a lot of cars coming and going and a lot of people going in and out of the house," said Wilson, who has lived in the area for more than 60 years. "He was a good guy."

Engert was hired by the landlord to help deputies gain entry to the apartment to serve the eviction notice, Adams said.

"He was there to open the lock," he said.

Law enforcement experts said it's not unusual to have a civilian, such as a locksmith, brought along during the service of an eviction notice. They said it's important for police to know who they are dealing with before knocking on a door.

"To be prudent, make sure the person inside is going along with the program before bringing someone like a locksmith," said Gregory Lee, a retired supervisory special agent for the Drug Enforcement Administration, who runs a consulting firm in Central California.

"The deputy is the messenger; he doesn't have a dog in the fight. Sometimes people attack the uniform, not the person," Lee said.

William Flynn, a retired lieutenant with the West Covina Police Department in Southern California, believes little could have been done if there was no indication the suspect in the Modesto eviction was violent.

"The only edge we have is to be on alert," he said. "If we lose that edge, that's when officers get hurt."

Officers are routinely provided training about executing search warrants. In most cases, agents learn about a suspect's background and their propensity for violence prior to serving the warrant.

The officers also take added precautions by wearing protective gear such as bulletproof vests and mull over scenarios if the person doesn't comply.

In Modesto, Rihanna Brookshire, who lives next door to the shooting scene, said her children had just gone outside to play when the shooting began. Just as they came back into the house and shut the door, they heard a loud bang.

"I thought it was a backfire. We looked outside. My daughter saw a police officer dead on the ground. She said, `Mommy, there's blood everywhere,'" said Brookshire, who was among the residents evacuated.

___

Associated Press writers Terry Collins and Garance Burke in San Francisco, and Greg Risling in Los Angeles, and researcher Rhonda Shafner in New York contributed to this report.

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MODESTO, Calif. — The body of a man suspected of gunning down a deputy and a locksmith when they tried to serve eviction papers was discovered Friday in the rubble of an apartment that was gutte...
MODESTO, Calif. — The body of a man suspected of gunning down a deputy and a locksmith when they tried to serve eviction papers was discovered Friday in the rubble of an apartment that was gutte...
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08:22 AM on 04/16/2012
If you hate this story ..then hate yourself ...you paid to kill this old man ...it was the TAX PAYER SUPPLIED GESTAPO...that did it
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
maybesomeday
If you take short cuts your always gonna come up s
08:03 AM on 04/16/2012
This could have been totally prevented (the loss of two innocent lives) if the bank officers who gave out the loan to this man went themselves to evict him.

That makes the most sense to me.
08:00 AM on 04/16/2012
I forgot while I was reading this story if this was in America or Syria.???
02:52 AM on 04/16/2012
The bad economy with its legal and illegal foreclosures can make some people react angrily and violently, the landlord & authorities should know that, or are they truly dumb and stupid.
10:03 PM on 04/15/2012
So only $30,000 was involved? Couldn't some accountant have arranged a payback loan of say $350-450 a month so he could have lived there? Social security disability would have helped if needed. If he had mental health issues couldn't the county have gotten him help? A social worker with the country could have prevented all this, maybe. Why do we not even try these alternative solutions? An officer would be alive today, the bank and home owners association would get paid, and the guy would be alive probably in a much healthier fashion. Instead $30,000 bought a shoulder held rocket launcher for afghanistan.
08:06 AM on 04/16/2012
But it also generated over 200,000 in tax payer money for the police overtime to help stimulate the economy ..if the IGS spend it appropriately....and locally
01:17 PM on 04/16/2012
The criminal justice system is the one domestic cost plus beuracracy within our government that just writes its own budget and gets whatever it wants. Only now with the recession are some local police dept.s feeling a budgetary pinch for the first time and having to prioritize
09:53 PM on 04/15/2012
so did the police flash bang grenades burn down the place? So if you don't leave they just burn you out?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rda1911a1
God Bless John Browning
08:40 PM on 04/15/2012
I'd say from now on tell them to vacate over the loud speaker then if they don't come out burn down the house. it gets the deadbeats to come out and removes the surplus property from the glutted market. Win Win
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jack Webb
Just the facts, ma'am'
11:55 PM on 05/25/2012
I feel really bad for your father. The guilt he no doubt feels for not wearing a condom on one particular occasion must indeed be truly staggering.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Foodgrade
Learn to grow banannas
06:40 PM on 04/15/2012
I guess there's some danger in serving as the corporations private army.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
MAJK
Economic Democracy > Capitalism
04:28 PM on 04/14/2012
White people are violent... sad.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
11:25 PM on 04/15/2012
You need to check out the Chicago page.
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Hanover Fiste
guilty as a cat in a goldfish bowl
12:06 PM on 04/14/2012
He was standing his ground.
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scrapper7
"Baby Jay-Cee:)"
10:13 PM on 04/13/2012
All Glendon David Engert from Modesto did Thursday morning, was go to work like any other day. Likewise, for Deputy Robert Paris. One difference, though. Glendon Engert was a locksmith, while Robert Paris was a law enforcement officer. The question is, how and why was Mr. Engert, a civilian, put in harms way? With all due respect, Deputy Paris was there doing what he was sworn to do. No doubt it's a tragedy that two men lost their lives, I just can't help feeling it was one too many. I sincerely hope the policy of non-law enforcement individuals, participating in operations such as this, changes. If it doesn't, then sadly, Mr. Engert died in vain.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Foodgrade
Learn to grow banannas
06:43 PM on 04/15/2012
Well, the locksmith should pick his jobs. Colluding with banker criminals, it seems, can be hazardous to your health. This entire thing of watching while others go down, or even trying to profit from it is not a sign of a healthy society. The cop and locksmith should have been at a bank headquarters where there is cause to evict someone.
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scrapper7
"Baby Jay-Cee:)"
08:11 PM on 04/15/2012
With all due respect, your response to my comment, says nothing. I'm at a total loss. All it tells me, is that you must have gone off your meds, or you drink WAAAAAAY too much coffee! But, bless your heart for the effort! :)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bkaas
Take luck!
09:09 PM on 04/13/2012
Hey HP,
Why is this story not on the front page? Or the story covering the other LEO's death yesterday?
Oh, Brad and Angelina are engaged. That is of greater societal importance, isn't it?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DMSmith
07:53 PM on 04/13/2012
Sad all the way around.
WHY must the police use incendiary devices in situations such as this. The additional loss of life, and the destruction of property on this level and the use of city resources for fire-fighting - all to root out a man who was going nowhere except into their custody.
What a sad waste in addition to the loss of officers.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dbrett480
02:09 AM on 04/14/2012
Flash bang grenades are not incendiary devices. We do not know for sure whether that started the fire or not. Making entry that way is a wise choice as officers do not know what other weapons he has. Nor is the department obligated to "wait him out" simply to avoid damage to property.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Foodgrade
Learn to grow banannas
06:46 PM on 04/15/2012
Gee, thats what they said at Waco. Don't cops ever think up a new story? Just escalate the violence, no thinking involved.
09:58 PM on 04/15/2012
I have seen flash bang grenades go off on videos and yes they do flash and put out a concussion wave which is pressurized hot gas and could start a fire if any accelerant in a stove or lighter or spilt can or top of lid open, or flammable curtains or clothes or thin papers are around You wouldn't expect it, but it can happen.
11:28 AM on 04/14/2012
Because getting someone out of their foreclosed house is considerably more important than the safety of the surrounding populace.

Yes, this is what the police think.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Foodgrade
Learn to grow banannas
06:47 PM on 04/15/2012
Police think? I thought it was the steroids doing the thinking.
olddognewtrick
Half full or half empty...It's the same
06:55 PM on 04/13/2012
Why was a civilian on the front line of this eviction?
11:28 AM on 04/14/2012
Human shield.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dan Crabtree
04:50 PM on 04/13/2012
Yep try to do what these cops do in 24 hours and live to tell about it the next day as todays society litterally reaks with these freaks of nature bent on self destruction or taking someone with them when they die..I sulute these individuals who lost there lives.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Foodgrade
Learn to grow banannas
07:03 PM on 04/15/2012
Oh please. Do a little research on the reality of police behavior in this country. They lie about the danger of the job just like they lie about everything else. Just google occupational danger. You'll find cops listed right with fast food employees on any study you look at. Any factory worker is in much more danger of injury or death. Most cops deaths on duty and off duty are automobile and drinking related. Sorry, but the whole cop hero thing is hype. Most are people that most people would not associate with. High domestic violence, high criminal tendencies, drug envolvement, selling guns on the street, smuggling contraband into prisons and jails. Actually pretty low end people that most people wouldn't want around their kids. I have no idea why they're allowed in schools.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rda1911a1
God Bless John Browning
08:42 PM on 04/15/2012
I take it you have a criminal record?