Orlando Sentinel

Before Phoenix killings, he was ex from hell

His former wife girded for attack but he hit 6 others

- By Matt Pearce

It was a happy marriage at first, though Dr. Connie Jones would later decide her husband was only pretending to be a good man.

By the end of their 22year marriage, he was perenniall­y unemployed, he stopped shaving and cutting his hair, and he seemed depressed.

“Looking at his eyes, there was nobody in there,” Jones told reporters Tuesday.

The final blow to their marriage came in 2009 when he threatened to kill her and kidnap their son, according to court records.

She filed for divorce and a protective order. But as is the case for many survivors of domestic abuse, her escape from her husband was only just beginning.

On May 31, Dwight Lamon Jones launched a killing rampage that left six people dead across the Phoenix area before he committed suicide as the police closed in.

The killings unsettled Arizona. But for Connie Jones, it was the end she had been fearing — and preparing for.

“I really have been on high alert for the last nine years . ... I knew that one day we would be in a situation where he was trying to kill me,” she said at a televised news conference. “I felt that I had a personal terrorist.”

After she filed for divorce, Connie Jones hired an investigat­or, Rick Anglin, a retired Phoenix police detective, to protect her and her son. They made themselves hard to find.

“Any personal habits they had, their favorite place to have a birthday dinner or Christmas Eve dinner, all this had to be changed,” Anglin told reporters at Tuesday’s news conference. “We basically had to deprogram them from what they would normally do.”

The family cycled through three safe houses to avoid Dwight Jones, who had moved into an extended-stay hotel. Connie Jones, who worked at a hospital, rotated through rental cars and switched up her driving routes so she would be harder to pin down.

Even going to the grocery store required planning, in case of any unexpected encounters. When Jones went to the movies, she sat in the back of the theater to watch out for her ex-husband.

It was as if she had to become a different person.

“It has become my personalit­y,” she said. “I don’t know that I can go out and not look and see who’s around me.”

Anglin also gave Jones “extensive” training with guns and defensive driving in case her ex-husband came for her. The pair spent a lot of time together, talking.

They became friends, and, eventually, more: They got married, and Anglin became her protector for life, and a father for her son.

Connie Jones never actually saw her ex-husband again; she only communicat­ed with him through lawyers.

Investigat­ors have not offered a reason for why Dwight Jones struck when he did.

His first victim was Steven Pitt, a well-known forensic psychiatri­st who had testified during the divorce that without mental help, Jones “will become increasing­ly paranoid, likely psychotic, and pose an even greater risk for perpetrati­ng violence.” His next victims were Veleria Sharp and Laura Anderson, paralegals at the law firm of Connie’s divorce attorney, Elizabeth Feldman, who was out of the office at the time. His fourth victim was Marshall Levine, a psychiatri­st who shared office space with Karen Kolbe, the counselor Connie had hired for the couple’s son. Kolbe, too, was out of the office when Jones attacked. Jones’ final victims were Mary Simmons and Byron Thomas, who did not have an apparent connection to the divorce case. Police said that Simmons sometimes played tennis with the killer.

As the number of victims grew, Anglin recognized the links and phoned police.

 ?? AP ?? Police say they don’t know why Dwight Jones went on a killing spree when he did.
AP Police say they don’t know why Dwight Jones went on a killing spree when he did.

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