PHOENIX — A man who shot his ex-girlfriend at a Phoenix home early Friday ambushed the first officer on the scene, seriously injuring him, then opened fire on other police as they tried to rescue a baby that was left outside the door.
The woman later died. In all, five officers were shot, including four who were wounded while trying to take the baby to safety. Four more officers were injured by shrapnel or ricocheting bullets, police said.
Of the five shot, four remain hospitalized. All of the officers were expected to survive, and the baby girl was unharmed.
“A baby is safe today because of our Phoenix police officers,” Mayor Kate Gallego said at a news conference near the scene.
The most seriously injured officer was the first to arrive at the home, around 2:15 a.m., following a report of a woman shot. He was invited inside, Phoenix police Sgt. Andy Williams said.
“As he approached the doorway, the suspect ambushed him with a gun and shot him several times,” he said. “That officer was able to get back and get away to safety.”
After that man was detained, other officers approached the doorway to get the baby girl, and the suspect fired more shots. The police returned fire, which then led the suspect to barricade himself. Eight of the officers were wounded by ricocheting bullets or shrapnel in that exchange, Williams said.
Police were able to get the baby to safety as a SWAT unit took over.
The suspect remained barricaded for several hours and was later found dead from a gunshot wound inside the home.
Police also found the suspect’s ex-girlfriend in the home. She had been shot and was critically injured, and she died hours later at a hospital, police said. Williams said the baby was believed to be the woman and suspect’s child. She is now in state custody.
The man who brought the baby outside suffered non-life-threatening injuries. Williams said he’s a family member and is cooperating with police.
“No information suggests that he’s part of the ambush, but it’s an ongoing investigation,” Williams said.
Police identified the gunman as 36-year-old Morris Richard Jones III and said they were still trying to learn about the circumstances preceding the incident.
“This is just one more example of the dangers that officers face every day keeping us and our community safe,” Police Chief Jeri Williams said at an early morning news conference. “If I seem upset, I am. This is senseless. It does not need to happen and it continues to happen over and over again.”
Federal court records show Jones has a criminal history dating back to at least 2007, when he was sentenced in Oklahoma to seven years in prison for using a firearm during a drug trafficking crime and possessing a fire arm after a felony conviction.
Records also show Jones pleaded guilty in March 2020 to conspiring to transport, for profit, people who were in the country illegally near the San Simmons area in southeastern Arizona. He was sentenced to three years of probation. Prosecutor sought to revoke his probation because they say Jones used marijuana and cocaine in the spring of 2021 and punched his girlfriend in the face and took her gun.
In September, his probation was revoked, and he was sentenced to federal prison for five months
The middle-class neighborhood in southwest Phoenix where the shooting occurred has newly constructed stucco houses tightly packed together and sits next to large shipping and fulfillment facilities for businesses. The home had its second-story windows shot out.
Frank DeAguilar, its owner, said the residence is a rental and he didn’t know anything about the people living there. He said a property management firm handles the details. “It’s just a sad situation,” he said.
Chris Grollnek, an active shooter expert, told The Associated Press that it’s important to know how the incident was initially reported. Was it a 911 call from the woman pleading for help? A neighbor reporting gunfire and screaming?
The immediate information would determine how the first officers respond as they get to the scene, he said.
Traditionally, a barricaded suspect buys the police time to set up a perimeter and call a SWAT team, which could take 20 minutes to arrive. But if someone is injured inside, “the human factor takes over,” Grollnek said. “I’m the first one there, I’m going in.”
Charles “Sid” Heal, former commanding officer of Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department’s SWAT unit, said department policies often give the decision-making authority to the responding officer.
Both Heal and Grollnek described firing on officers who are trying to save a baby as “evil.” They said police protocols simply cannot cover such a scenario.
“Hopefully it doesn’t happen often enough that we’ll ever have a protocol for it,” Heal said.
He added he cannot imagine a situation where the officers would have left the baby exposed because it was too dangerous for them to rescue the child.
“The moral factors far exceed the physical risk,” he said.