Jun 13
Shawna Forde, one of three charged with murder in an Arivaca home invasion, is escorted from the Pima County Sheriff's Department.

Shawna Forde, one of three charged with murder in an Arivaca home invasion, is escorted from the Pima County Sheriff's Department.

Three people, including the leader of a border watch group and an officer within that group, were arrested in connection with a May 30 home invasion that left a father and his daughter dead and the mother wounded, authorities said.

One of those arrested, Shawna Forde, is the leader of Minutemen American Defense, a group out of Washington state that conducts operations along the U.S.-Mexican border in Arizona. The group is not related to either the Minuteman Civil Defense Corps founded by Chris Simcox, or the Minuteman Project founded by Jim Gilchrist.

Jaso Eugene Bush

Jaso Eugene Bush

Authorities also arrested Jason Eugene Bush, 34, who serves as operations director for the Washington group, and Albert Robert Gaxiola, 42, in connection with the shooting deaths of Raul Flores, 29, and his 9-year-old daughter, Brisenia Flores, said Pima County Sheriff Clarence Dupnik.

The three are charged with two counts of first-degree murder, one count of first degree burglary, and one count of aggravated assault.

Several men and a woman claiming to be police officers forced their way into the home in the middle of the night May 30 and killed the pair. The girl’s mother was wounded, and investigators believe she returned fire, injuring Bush, Dupnik said.

Dupnik painted a grim picture of the tragedy during a press conference Friday at the Sheriff’s Department headquarters.

Raul Flores was a suspected drug dealer, and the three suspects targeted the house with the intention of stealing money and drugs, he said.

Bush was the suspected shooter, Dupnik said.

Albert Robert Gaxiola, one of three charged with murder in an Arivaca home invasion, is escorted from the Pima County Sheriff's Department.

Albert Robert Gaxiola, one of three charged with murder in an Arivaca home invasion, is escorted from the Pima County Sheriff's Department.

They did not plan to leave any survivors, he said. “The plan was to kill everyone. To kill a 9-year-old because she might be a potential witness is one of the most despicable acts I’ve heard of.”

Dupnik said Forde and her cohorts even searched for the couple’s other daughter, who had spent the night at her grandmother’s, with the intention of killing her.

Detectives arrested Bush Thursday in Kingman on a probation violation warrant for auto theft in Washington state, he said.

Bush is currently in a Kingman hospital recovering from a bullet wound after he was shot in the left calf by the mother, Dupnik said.

He will face extradition for the murders when he is released from the hospital, Dupnik said.

Forde was arrested Friday near Sierra Vista, and Gaxiola was taken into custody near South Park Avenue and Benson Highway, he said.

Forde was the suspected ringleader of the operation. Investigators believe the three planned to sell the drugs after the home invasion, he said.

Investigators are still trying to determine if anything was taken from the home, Dupnik said.

He did not elaborate on how the suspects knew the victim, other than to say some of the suspects knew him.
Gaxiola lives in Arivaca, while Bush lived in Meadview, a small community in Northern Arizona near the Nevada border, he said.

Forde is originally from Washington, but Dupnik did not know where she currently lived.

She declined to talk with reporters but denied involvement in the homicides as she was escorted by deputies from the Sheriff’s Department headquarters.

Forde has a troubled history that includes accusing her son’s friends of shooting her ex-husband and later raping and beating her in Everett, Wash., in December.

Her son was sentenced to prison in October after being convicted of being a felon in possession of weapons.
Forde is executive director of Minutemen American Defense, a border watch group that claims to secure the U.S. Border from human and drug trafficking, according to its Web site.

The Minutemen American Defense group is not associated with the Minutemen Civil Defense Corps, said Al Garza, vice president of the Minutemen Civil Defense Corps.

Forde was a leader with the Civil Defense Corps a few years ago but was dismissed after a few months because of leadership issues, he said.

Garza did not have a working relationship with Forde, but he met her when she came to Arizona in 2005, he said.

“She showed signs of poor leadership, but I didn’t see any wrongdoing,” he said.

Bush, whose nickname is Gunny, is the operations director for the group.

According to the Web site, he is a military veteran who has served numerous tours overseas and is in charge of all operations for the organization along the southern border.

“I take a very hard line with drugs and illegal immigration. Make no bones about it, I have a zero tolerance for terrorists, and that is what they are,” he wrote on the Web site.

SOURCES: Arizona Starnet

Apr 21

Anti-illegal immigration vigilante Chris Simcox is slated to announce Wednesday that he will challenge Arizona Sen. John McCain in a Republican primary in 2010.

A Simcox media coordinator confirmed that he has several media events scheduled across the state, including an announcement at the Arizona State Capitol in Phoenix. Simcox also has a campaign Web site set up — www.simcoxforsenate.com.

“It’s time to help put Arizona and America back on the right track by electing Chris Simcox to represent the Great State of Arizona in the United States Senate,” the site says. “As a grass-roots, border security vigilante and founder of the original Minuteman Civil Defense Corps (MCDC), Chris has done more to make Arizona a haven for right wing nut jobs and gun toting psychos and more dangerous place to live than most of the sanctimonious career politicians in Washington, D.C.”

The mission of the Minuteman Civil Defense Corps is to serve as a “neighbhorhood watch” for America’s simcox_200borders to prevent unlawful entry. The group says it provides evidence of illegal immigration to law enforcement officials, distinguishing itself from the Minutemen Project, a separate anti-illegal immigration organization that critics say promotes vigilante justice.The two groups are often confused, although there is really no difference in the two.

Simcox’s stance on immigration could attract the state’s conservative voters, who have been turned off in recent years by McCain’s support of legislation overhauling the current immigration system, among other more moderate domestic policy stances. And primary voters tend to hail disproportionately from parties’ extremes. But it’s unclear that would be enough to knock off McCain, who has been re-elected with large margins since 1998.

Wary of a challenge in 2010, McCain has stockpiled $3.6 million in his campaign account for 2010, as of the end of March. He raised $380,000 in the first quarter of the year.

At least one Arizonan dismissed the seriousness of the challenge. Asked about the news Tuesday, the state’s junior senator, Jon Kyl, laughed off the idea that Simcox could give McCain any kind of run for his money.

“For you all that don’t know, that’s not necessarily tough news for Sen. McCain,” Kyl said, still chuckling.

We agree with Senator Kyle!

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