Monday, September 30, 2013

Isaac Zamora 2008 Shooting Spree


September 2, 2008 Isaac Zamora 2008 Shooting Spree  Isaac Zamora killed a sheriff's deputy and five civilians as part of a shooting rampage in Skagit County, Washington, while wounding two others. Zamora then led police on a high speed chase, still shooting and killing one motorist. He drove to a sheriff's office and surrendered, where he was subsequently arrested. Deputy Anne Jackson responded to a call made by Zamora's mother, Dennise. When Jackson did not check in with dispatch, police responded to the home and found her dead along with another victim Chester Rose 58. Three more bodies were later discovered. Zamora also shot and wounded a motorcyclist and grazed the arm of a state trooper who was chasing him. Prior to the killings, Zamora had been struggling with mental illness since the family's home burned down a decade earlier. Zamora had been on supervised release for theft and felony drug possession and made contact with his parole officer a few months prior. Zamora was regarded as a nonviolent offender, but was supervised as a high risk offender because of his mental heath issues. His state had deteriorated in recent months, and his family had compelled

- A lawyer for some of the victims of a 2008 shooting spree in Skagit County says Washington state has agree to pay $9 million to settle claims

 been deemed too dangerous to stay in a hospital

 28-year-old Isaac Zamora killed a sheriff's deputy along with five other people and he also wounded two more. As the Seattle Times' article goes on to say, Zamora led police on a high speed chase along Interstate 5 in his full-size pick-up truck. The chase ended when he went to Skagit County Sheriff's Office and surrendered to authorities. The only person of those slain identified was the sheriff's deputy, Anne Jackson. She had responded to an emergency call from Zamora's mother, Dennise Zamora.
Dennisse Zamora indicated in the article that her son had been "extremely mentally ill." Further she said that he had been living off and on in the woods alone. According to her, Isaac Zamora had been fighting mental illness since the family house burned down over ten years ago.

wiki.name.com/en/Zamora
ORIGIN AND HISTORY . Zamora is a geographic surname, originally given to those who lived in or near the city of Zamora, Spain. The name of the city is of Arabic origin

Issac: 
After Isaac had been weaned, Sarah saw Ishmael mocking, and urged her husband to cast outHagar the bondservant and her son, so that Isaac would be Abraham's sole heir. Abraham was hesitant, but at God's order he listened to his wife's request.[10]


Reference:
  • Freebase 
  • Seattle Times profiles here.
  • USA today
  • Wikipedia - no article 


.Topics

  • .criminal He racked up dozens of arrests on criminal charges. While none of those were for particularly violent offenses, they were enough for him to draw extra scrutiny from the state Department of Corrections, which supervised him in the community under a special program for offenders with mental il
  • Killed for, listened to "god"

Timeline


  • Zamora was about 14, the family home burned down and they lost everything.  It's all we can do to keep the electricity on," Dennise Zamora wrote as part of the family's bankruptcy petition.
  • diagnosed Zamora as suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder 
  • stole his mother's gun to sell to another teenager, but was later charged with filing a false report after telling police a stranger had stolen it.
  • Ex-girlfriend Connie Hickman met Zamora around 2000 when they were both working at a health-care facility. At the time, Zamora had trouble holding jobs.
  • 2001, for example, Zamora and an accomplice were investigated for stealing an outboard motor. Dennise Zamora crawled through an open window of a house trailer where her son lived on their property and turned turned it over to police. Zamora pleaded guilty to second-degree theft and served three days in jail with 17 days of community service.
  • 2003, Hickman and Dennise Zamora took him to a Whatcom County hospital, saying they feared for their safety. 
  • May 2007, he flew into a rage hurling a concrete block into the friend's car. Zamora was charged with second-degree malicious mischief.
  • Zamora took his medication in the hospital, but when he was released he stopped, Hickman said, partly because "he didn't have a job so he couldn't pay for medication."
  • May 15 2008, he signed a guilty plea and agreed not to possess or own firearms, although neighbors said at some point he had a collection of six or seven guns. He was released on Aug. 6 and the Department of Corrections (DOC) said he checked in regularly and passed a drug test on Aug. 21.
  • September 2, 2008 Dennise Zamora said her son had been entering the homes of neighbors in Alger throughout much of Tuesday. 
  • When Rose called to say that he was inside his home, Dennise Zamora told him to call police.
  • Deputy Ann Jackson responded to the Zamora home at 2:50 p.m. Dennise Zamora sent the deputy up to Rose's house.

  • Fellow deputies, becoming concerned when Jackson hadn't checked in more than an hour later, showed up at the scene and found Jackson and Rose dead at Rose's house.
  • construction workers Radcliffe and Gillum had been killed at another house
  • Binschus had been killed at her home, with other victims wounded in the same area
  • Lange killed south of Alger on I-5 as he drove toward Mount Vernon.
  • Zamora led police on a high speed chase along Interstate 5 in his full-size pick-up truck. 
  • The chase ended when he went to Skagit County Sheriff's Office and surrendered to authorities. 

.freebase 

Isaac Zamora en

mid/m/05z_fwc notable type: /people/person
Isaac Zamora (born 1980) is an American mass murderer. On September 2, 2008, Zamora killed a sheriff's deputy and five civilians as part of a shooting rampage in Skagit County, Washington, while wounding two others. Zamora then led police on a high speed chase, still shooting and killing one motorist. He drove to a sheriff's office and surrendered, where he was subsequently arrested. Deputy Anne Jackson responded to a call made by Zamora's mother, Dennise. When Jackson did not check in with dispatch, police responded to the home and found her dead along with another victim Chester Rose 58. Three more bodies were later discovered. Zamora also shot and wounded a motorcyclist and grazed the arm of a state trooper who was chasing him. Prior to the killings, Zamora had been struggling with mental illness since the family's home burned down a decade earlier. Zamora had been on supervised release for theft and felony drug possession and made contact with his parole officer a few months prior. Zamora was regarded as a nonviolent offender, but was supervised as a high risk offender because of his mental heath issues. His state had deteriorated in recent months, and his family had compelled

.mental illness


http://seattletimes.com/html/localnews/2008162802_shootings06m.html  exhibited increasing signs of serious mental illness, ranging from suicide attempts to auditory hallucinations, from smashed windshields to outright threats. He racked up dozens of arrests on criminal charges. While none of those were for particularly violent offenses, they were enough for him to draw extra scrutiny from the state Department of Corrections, which supervised him in the community under a special program for offenders with mental il





.Sources 


October 15, 2009 9:54 AM

Skagit Valley Herald: Zamora death-penalty decision in a month

Posted by John de Leon
Isaac L. Zamora's defense attorneys expect to turn in paperwork on Monday arguing against the death penalty for the man charged with killing six people and wounding four others in a Sept. 2, 2008, shooting spree, according to the Skagit Valley Herald.
Zamora's two attorneys tell The Herald they have spent the past several months compiling the so-called mitigation package for Skagit County Prosecutor Rich Weyrich. The packages usually contain a health history, family history and information on upbringing and good deeds, defense attorney Wes Richards said.
Once the information is submitted, Weyrich will then have until Nov. 16 to decide whether to seek the death penalty.
Zamora is accused of killing five people, including Skagit County sheriff's deputy Anne Jackson, in the town of Alger before stealing a pickup and killing another man on Interstate 5. To read court documents that detail the rampage, click here. A word of warning: The documents contain some graphic information.
To read a Seattle Times profile of Zamora, click here.



 Isaac Zamora, the man accused of killing six people during a shooting rampage earlier this week in Skagit County, told a judge Friday afternoon, "I kill for God. I listen to God.
At the end of his arraignment, Zamora was presented with court documents and was asked to sign them to acknowledge he had been charged.
"I'll sign," Zamora told Gilbert. Then he said, "I kill for God. I listen to God."
It was the first time Zamora has spoken during two court appearances; the first was Wednesday when he was ordered held for the slayings of six people, including Skagit County sheriff's Deputy Anne Jackson.
 filed against Zamora that was made public, however, suggested for the first time that motives such as robbery, rape, burglary, arson and kidnapping may have been part of the crime. It also indicates the slaying of one victim, neighbor Julie Binschus, 48, may have been premeditated.

www.king5.com/news/crime/State-to-pay-9-million-Skagit-Co-shooting...
OLYMPIA, Wash. -- A lawyer for some of the victims of a 2008 shooting spree in Skagit County says Washington state has agree to pay $9 million to settle claims that ...
  • www.king5.com/news/crime/Isaac-Zamora-Skagit-county-shootings...
    Isaac Zamora, the man who killed six people including a sheriff’s deputy during ashooting rampage in Skagit County in 2008, has been deemed too dangerous to stay ...
  • voices.yahoo.com/shooting-rampage-alger-washington-leaves-six-dead...
    Sep 03, 2008 · A Washington state man, Isaac Zamora, has been arrested in connection with a shooting rampage that has left six dead and at least two more …
  • voices.yahoo.com/isaac-zamora-kills-six-northwest-shooting-rampage...
    Aug 21, 2008 · Isaac Zamora Kills Six in Northwest Shooting Rampage 28-Year-Old Wounds Two More in Unexplained Crime
     in their article "6 dead in Skagit County shooting rampage," are reporting that 28-year-old Isaac Zamora killed a sheriff's deputy along with five other people and he also wounded two more. As the Seattle Times' article goes on to say, Zamora led police on a high speed chase along Interstate 5 in his full-size pick-up truck. The chase ended when he went to Skagit County Sheriff's Office and surrendered to authorities. The only person of those slain identified was the sheriff's deputy, Anne Jackson. She had responded to an emergency call from Zamora's mother, Dennise Zamora.
    Dennisse Zamora indicated in the article that her son had been "extremely mentally ill." Further she said that he had been living off and on in the woods alone. According to her, Isaac Zamora had been fighting mental illness since the family house burned down over ten years ago.
    Zamora was under state supervision because of a history of drug possession and theft having last reported to his probation officer August 21st, 2008.
    Authorities at this time have no idea what might have triggered this incident.
    Of note is the fact that Skagit County released Isaac Zamora from prison while he was serving felony time for drug possession. 
  • groundreport.com/isaac-zamora-is-suspect-in-shooting-spree-that...
    Isaac Zamora is now in custody after allegedly killing six people and injuring two more in remote Alger, Washington yesterday. Police say that Isaac
  • seattletimes.com/html/localnews/2010287726_webzamora17m.html
    Isaac Zamora pleads guilty in Skagit County shooting rampage. A man charged with killing six people, including a sheriff's deputy, in a Washington state shooting ...
  • www.foxnews.com › On Air Now › On Air Personalities
    May 01, 2010 · Authorities said the man accused of a shooting rampage that left six people dead in northwest Washington stole the guns used in the attacks as well as a ...
  • www.komonews.com/news/local/46293367.html
    A Washington State Trooper leads shooting suspect, Isaac Zamora, 28, to the county jail, Tuesday Sept. 2, after a shooting rampage that left six dead. SKAGIT COUNTY ..


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