Sherriff killed due to Headshot

Lemonking

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I just talked to my Grandma a friend of my dad was looking for a suspect in Hawaiian Gardens once he knocked on the door the mexican gang member opend the door and put a bullet in to Sherriffs head he died before he hit the deck
they got the guy that shot him he looks really scary saysmy grandma, tatoo on his forehead etc......poor guy my dads really depressed he didnt even wanna talk with me
 
that's really sad, my condolences to your grandma and and that sherif's family...... err :(
 
Sorry to hear that, but if it's your time, I guess that's the way to go. Instantly and painlessly.
 
lol...... whateva however do you guys think he wll get the gas chamber or the posen shot?
 
Lemonking said:
lol...... whateva however do you guys think he wll get the gas chamber or the posen shot?
depends upon the state. probably lethal injection.
 
I can't believe America still uses capital punishment. I guess we don't hear it on the news since it's so common...
 
i thought california hasn't used the death penalty in like 50 years
 
ohyeah sure feed him for 50 years give hhim a bed to sleep in......
 
Lethal Injection.. I think the gas chamber, or electric chair would be better. The injection it's self would hurt a lot.
 
lethal injection, into the brain with a plunger with a pointy 12" nail coated in the poison which makes your lungs reatard:)

that is what capitol punishment should be, thusly making sure no one wants to go like that, reducing level of crime:)

and u dont neccisarily have to actually do it the thought of that way of dying in tortureous agony would be enough, for the idiots who still commit the crime they should get slapped before they killed:P
 
In my opinion people like that don't deserve the luxury of a painless quick death.


He should be made to suffer in a cell for the rest of his natural life.
 
I don't understand your original post :P who killed the sherrif? and what has that got to do with your dad and the grandma
 
I would say lethal injection would be the best way to go. The electric chair being the worst.

As far as the policy of capital punishment ... I think it's a little barbaric. Not that I particularly care if this guy lives or dies, the world is a better place without him. But the act of executing unarmed prisoners is just downright unethical. "Eye for an eye" is an extremely outdated judicial system.

Now, proponents of the policy will say, "what if it was your sibling/spouse/parent/child." In that case I would want to kill them myself. However, the idea of a judicial system is to provide impartial judgement - the will of a victim hungry for revenge has no place.
 
Joims said:
lethal injection, into the brain with a plunger with a pointy 12" nail coated in the poison which makes your lungs reatard:)

that is what capitol punishment should be, thusly making sure no one wants to go like that, reducing level of crime:)

What's harsher than dying in the first place?* You'd think the fact that people keep killing eachother even with capitol punishment enforced would be enough to dissuade people from the 'deterrent' argument

*NB obviously, I'd rather die with a quick painless lethal injection than a pointy 12" nail coated with poison, but at the end of the day it's just a means to a very final end.
 
Slowly and painful, that's what his death should be. He killed that guy in cold blood, the least you can do is return the favor.
 
UPDATE:
FYI

Deputy Ortiz's loss mourned

By David Rogers
Staff writer

HAWAIIAN GARDENS — Family and friends came together Sunday to mourn the death of slain Los Angeles County sheriff's deputy Jerry Ortiz, as small memorials grew at his parents' home and at the site where he was gunned down Friday.

Ortiz, a gang investigator and a 15-year member of the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department, was shot in the 12200 block of 223rd Street while waiting to interview a woman for an attempted murder case, officials said Saturday. Jose Luis Orozco, whom Ortiz was investigating, allegedly came from inside the house and shot Ortiz once in the face at close range.

Orozco allegedly shot someone in Hawaiian Gardens in a gang-related incident on June 20, sheriff's homicide Capt. Ray Peavy said Saturday.

"Just have a lot of faith and everything going on, that he's in a good place right now, and we're all going to work together with all his family and friends here," the deputy's brother, Javier Ortiz, told KCAL-9 on Sunday.

Ortiz also was remembered at St. Denis Catholic Church in Diamond Bar, where he had been an usher.

"It's a great loss … the guy dedicated himself so much," head usher Joe Salaises told KCAL.

Parishioner Kathleen Ridley's son is a deputy.

"It's such a heartbreak for all the deputies, the family of the deputy, and it just grabs my heart, and I'm just feeling so very sad for all of them," she told the TV station.

No new information about the shooting was released Sunday, and Deputy Luis Castro said he didn't expect more information would be released until it's presented in court against Orozco. He said he expected that funeral arrangements would be announced soon.

Orozco was found hiding in a nearby residence shortly before midnight Friday, and was booked for a parole violation, authorities said. District Steve Cooley said Saturday that a first-degree murder charge, which could carry the death penalty, could be filed early this week.

Ortiz, a 35-year-old Diamond Bar resident, had married his third wife, Chela, three weeks before he was slain. He also had two sons, ages 16 and 6.

Along with Deputy Tim Brennan, Ortiz received the city of Lakewood's Award of Valor last year for pursuing and killing a gunman who threatened Brennan, his partner. They also arrested two suspected gang members, and found a sawed-off .22-caliber rifle.

Some Hawaiian Gardens residents said Sunday that they were shocked by the slaying.

"That's pretty traumatizing," said a woman who grew up in the neighborhood, and who still has family members who live there. She asked not to be identified.

"I'm telling you, it's not safe," she said, adding that she felt city officials haven't done enough to stop gang violence. "What are they going to do about it, to ensure the residents' safety? How safe is the city when a police officer gets shot, point-blank?"

Lonny Furgeson, a 71-year-old nearby resident who owns the building where the shooting took place, said he rents the house there to a single mother. He said he was at home when the shooting happened, but he didn't hear a shot fired he didn't even know about it until he turned on the 4 p.m. television news. He said his tenant wasn't there when he dropped by Saturday night, but her mother was.

"She was kind of upset," said Ferguson, who has lived in Hawaiian Gardens most of his life, and whose late father, Venn W. Ferguson, was a city councilman and mayor. "I think she was sorry that (Ortiz) got killed. Don't know what her daughter had to do with it. I guess she's going to find out that stuff
 
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