Ohio Shooter arrested in Vegas

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LAS VEGAS (March 17) - Charles A. McCoy Jr., suspected in two dozen sniper shootings that have terrorized motorists along Ohio highways, was arrested at a Las Vegas motel early Wednesday, authorities said.

''We got him in custody without incident,'' said Las Vegas police Lt. Christopher Van Cleef.

Van Cleef said McCoy, 28, was arrested at a motel near the Stardust casino Wednesday, two days after he was named as a suspect in the two dozen Columbus-area shootings.

Police were told of McCoy's whereabouts by a person who recognized him from media reports, Van Cleef said.

''He wasn't armed, but we haven't been in the motel room or his vehicle yet,'' Van Cleef said. He said police have impounded a 1999 Geo Metro that McCoy was driving.

Police had said McCoy had a history of mental illness and was believed to be armed, with ''suicidal or homicidal tendencies.'' His family refuted that description, calling McCoy troubled but peaceful.

''I knew it would happen without incident because he was a very passive individual,'' McCoy's sister Amy Walton said on NBC's ''Today'' show. ''This came as a great shock to our family.''

When asked what she would say to her brother, Walton said, ''We can't wait to talk to you. Everything will be OK.''

FBI special agent Todd Palmer said McCoy is being processed in the agency's office and likely will be transferred to the U.S. attorney's office.

''They'll be in communication with the Columbus U.S. attorney,'' Palmer said.

The 24 shootings around several highways on the southern outskirts of Columbus pierced homes and a school, dented school buses, flattened tires and shattered windshields. They began in May.

The shootings prompted commuters to take detours and schools to cancel classes or hold recess indoors. Police increased patrols and offered a $60,000 reward. The state installed cameras on poles along Interstate 270.

The only person struck, Gail Knisley, 62, was killed as a friend drove her to a doctor's appointment Nov. 25. Lab tests showed that bullets from nine of the shootings - including the one that killed Knisley - were fired from the same gun.

Authorities haven't said what evidence led them to McCoy. Newspaper and television reports Tuesday said McCoy's family gave investigators at least one of his guns.

Edward Cable of Lucasville, whose minivan was hit by a bullet as he was driving on Nov. 21, said Wednesday he was glad to see McCoy was picked up.

''Not so much for myself, but for anybody else whose worried about getting him off the street,'' Cable said. ''I haven't talked to my daughters yet, but my wife was pretty happy he was picked up.''

An arrest warrant charges McCoy with felonious assault in a shooting with a 9 mm handgun that damaged a house Dec. 15.

The description of the car and McCoy were similar to what witnesses told investigators they saw in the three most recent shootings.

Until January, the gunfire was scattered along or near Interstate 270, the busy highway that encircles Columbus. The last four shootings had moved toward the southwest on I-71.

In a missing person's report filed Monday, McCoy's mother, Ardith, said her son was upset over a possible move. She said he withdrew $600 from a bank account and left home Friday for a restaurant and bar that features video games at a nearby mall.

A check of court records in Franklin and nearby Delaware and Fairfield counties turned up a handful of traffic tickets for McCoy, but no other criminal or civil charges.

Neighbors on McCoy's street said they didn't know much about the suspect or his mother. The McCoys moved there about a year ago, did some repairs and put the house back up for sale.

The tan garage doors at the house were splattered with three eggs Tuesday. Police said they did not know who hurled the eggs or when they were thrown.

McCoy's high school football coach said he's praying for his former player.

''He was an ornery kid, but a lot of kids are ornery at that age,'' said Brian Cross, who coached McCoy for four years at Grove City High School. ''I don't remember him doing anything extreme.''


03-17-04 07:49 EST

Copyright 2004 The Associated Press.
 
It's about time, the folks in Ohio might be able to sleep at night again.
 
Good news, but I hate to say it........he'll probably plead insanity and a lawyer will get him off.
 
Wow, thats like still big news over here. Who knows what this madman couldve done? Thank god they got to him before he could terrorize this place too.
 
That is fantastic news. I just hope it's the guy who has been doing all of the shooting. I also hope there aren't any copycat snipers out there.
 
Thank heavens they have him at last. I knew when they put all that info on tv last night that it wouldn't be long before he was found. I am glad he gave himself up peacefully.
 
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The capture of the suspect in the deadly highway shooting spree has prompted questions about who should get the $60,000 reward _ the man who recognized him at a Las Vegas casino or family members who reportedly turned him in.

"It makes it very difficult because there's so many pieces of the puzzle," Central Ohio Crime Stoppers director Kevin Miles said Thursday.

The questions about the reward money came a day after 28-year-old Charles A. McCoy Jr. was arrested in the parking lot of a low-budget motel in Las Vegas.

Investigators are looking into whether they have grounds to seek the death penalty for the shooting death of Gail Knisley, said Franklin County Prosecutor Ron O'Brien on Thursday.

McCoy's lawyer, Andrew Haney, said his client could be back in Ohio as soon as Friday night.

Conrad Malsom, an out-of-work salesman, recognized McCoy after spotting him in a casino sports book reading a newspaper article about himself. He later tracked down McCoy's car at the motel where he was staying.

O'Brien said Malsom would be a candidate for the reward, along with "certain members" of McCoy's family. He would not identify the relatives or discuss what led authorities to suspect McCoy was the highway shooter.

The Columbus Dispatch, citing unidentified sources, has reported a relative of McCoy contacted police to say he could be a suspect, and McCoy's father gave authorities a 9 mm pistol that was matched to some of the bullet fragments recovered in the shootings.

According to the task force investigating the 24 shootings, the reward would go to "anyone that provides information that leads to the arrest and indictment of the person" responsible for the Nov. 25 shooting of Knisley, the only person struck in the shootings.

McCoy's sister, Amy Walton, thanked Malsom at a news conference Thursday for his role in helping deliver her brother to police without anyone being injured.

"You, along with God, answered my prayers because I was imagining the worst," she said.

Lab tests showed that bullets from nine of the shootings _ including Knisley's slaying _ were fired from the same gun.

As of Thursday, McCoy was only charged in an arrest warrant with felonious assault for a shooting with a 9 mm handgun that damaged a house in Columbus on Dec. 15.

For the reward to be given out, McCoy would have to be charged in Knisley's death.

Miles said he hoped to give out the reward in the next two months.

Most of the reward money came from area businesses. Shannon Sparks, 61, said he felt compelled to donate $5,000 because he has many family members who live in the Columbus area where most of the shootings happened.

"I have a lot of relatives that drive that road, and I've got one aunt that drives it to go to near where that man lives, to church, no less, and she started taking a different route," he said.
 
Pretty funny that the guy was turned in by a guy who bought him pizza. Guess whatever happens in Vegas, stays in Vegas, or in this case, will be extradited to Ohio.
 
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