Trending Topics

Explosives found at home of Texas deputy’s killer

TexasdeputyHP.jpg

Chambers County Sheriff Joe LaRive holds framed photos of sheriff’s deputy Shane Detwiler’s family. Earlier this week, a shootout and standoff at a rural mobile home park near Baytown, Texas led to Detwiler, 31, being shot and killed. The gunman, a former reserve police officer Gilbert Ortez, Jr., was found dead inside the trailer home. (AP Photo/Houston Chronicle, Mayra Beltran)

By Arelis Hernandez
Associated Press

BAYTOWN, Texas — At least 100 explosive devices were found in a southeast Texas mobile home where a deputy was shot and killed, a sheriff said Tuesday.

A bomb squad found homemade pipe bombs, gas grenades and altered tear gas devices with booby traps in the mobile home where Deputy Shane Detwiler was shot twice in the head, Chambers County Sheriff Joe LaRive said at a news conference.

Detwiler’s death set off a 9 1/2-hour standoff that ended when police and deputies entered the mobile home and found suspected gunman Gilbert Ortez Jr. dead.

Law enforcement agents also found several firearms and drawings containing swastikas and other Nazi themes, LaRive said. Investigators don’t know whether Ortez had connections to white supremacist groups, he said.

Any of the explosives could have leveled the trailer near Baytown, LaRive said.

Law enforcement agents began removing explosives from the home when the standoff ended Monday night and that work continued Tuesday. They asked neighbors to stay away from the area until the search and recovery was done.

Law enforcement agents said they found an assault rifle next to Ortez’s body, and an autopsy showed the 37-year-old died of a self-inflicted gun shot wound to the head.

However, Ortez’s family is asking for an independent investigation, saying Chambers County deputies entered the home unlawfully.

LaRive said investigators were examining footage from dashboard cameras but rejected claims of wrongdoing.

“My officers were 150 percent in the right in what they did,” he said.

Deputies went to Ortez’s home Monday after a meter reader sent to shut off the water service reported shots had been fired at her. They arrested Ortez’s common-law wife, Pamela Leggett, 29, and charged her with aggravated assault with a deadly weapon and resisting arrest.

Ortez was at the mobile home when Leggett was arrested and shot Detwiler when the deputy went inside.

Leggett could face additional charges because of the explosives found in the home, Chambers County District Attorney Cheryl Lieck said.

Texas Rangers have taken over the investigation. Detwiler will be buried Friday.