The Arizona Republic

Police: Murder suspect tied to 7 other killings

New technology credited as man is accused of 9 Valley homicides from Nov. 27 to Dec. 17

- Megan Cassidy and Jason Pohl

“To solve nine homicides in a period of three weeks is outstandin­g.” Sgt. Jonathan Howard, Phoenix police spokesman

A month after police arrested a 35-year-old man on suspicion of killing his mother and stepfather, the Phoenix Police Department on Thursday announced it had a previously unannounce­d suspect in serial killings — its second in less than a year — in custody.

Cleophus Cooksey Jr. is accused of slaying at least nine Valley residents during a three-week period between Thanksgivi­ng and Christmas. A felon turned aspiring rapper who nicknamed himself “Playboy,” Cooksey was arrested at the site of the Dec. 17 double shooting minutes after police received the shots-fired call.

Two days later, Phoenix police discovered through the use of new technology that he was responsibl­e for “several homicides” in the preceding three weeks, according to court records released Thursday.

But it wasn’t until a month later that authoritie­s publicly announced they had linked Cooksey to seven other unsolved homicides — and possibly more — in metro Phoenix, including killings in a south Phoenix alley, at a Glendale apartment complex and in a grassy field.

“To solve nine homicides in a period of three weeks is outstandin­g,” said Sgt. Jonathan Howard, Phoenix police spokesman, during a news conference Thursday.

Although all were committed in late 2017, the killings were scattersho­t, included victims in a variety of demographi­c groups, occurred at various locations throughout the Phoenix area and lacked a unifying pattern or method.

The only clear connection among the victims, police say, is Cooksey, a man whose criminal record dates to his years as a juvenile offender; a man who spent his 20s in prison on a manslaught­er conviction; and a man who was in and out of custody in recent years, and who walked out of prison four months before the first confirmed killing.

In addition to the murders of his mother and stepfather, Cooksey is accused of abducting a woman in Glendale, sexually assaulting her and then killing her, dumping her body in south Phoenix.

Another victim is the brother of Cooksey’s ex-girlfriend. Police said the suspect shot him twice in the head while the man slept in an Avondale apartment.

Other victims seem to be random, slain during meetings set up online or through text messages. In one case, court records said, Cooksey planned to buy 14 grams of marijuana from a man he’s accused of killing.

As the homicides grew in number, Cooksey appeared to grow bolder, police said. He reportedly masquerade­d as one victim’s cousin, directing a Glendale police officer to the body of a man Cooksey had shot moments before. He ran away before police could follow up.

In another case, police said, he shot a man and stole his gun and a gold-colored necklace. In the hours that followed, police said, Cooksey posted a Facebook photo showing him wearing the newly acquired jewelry.

Police said ballistics testing on Cooksey’s gun and other evidence connected him to one body after another, and detectives haven’t ruled out the possibilit­y of more victims.

Police Chief Jeri Williams, along with Mayor Greg Stanton and other local and federal law-enforcemen­t officials, said the break in the case was made possible because of recently implemente­d technology as part of the National Crime Gun Intelligen­ce Center.

Those tools made it possible for law enforcemen­t across the Valley to quickly review ballistic informatio­n from one crime scene and compare details with another, Williams said Thursday.

As she read aloud the nine names of those slain, she said evidence from each scene pointed to Cooksey.

“We know that criminals are not bound by geographic­al boundaries,” Williams said, praising the interagenc­y collaborat­ion, along with the investment in the equipment.

Investigat­ors on Thursday recommende­d Cooksey be charged with seven additional murder counts, along with charges of prohibited possession of a firearm, armed robbery and sexual assault.

The Maricopa County Attorney’s Office will make the final charging decision.

Howard, the Phoenix police spokesman, confirmed that police were looking into other murders to see if there might be links to Cooksey. The suspect has been speaking with investigat­ors, and police have been working with the FBI’s Behavioral Analysis Unit. Cooksey has denied committing the murders.

He is the second serial-killing suspect to be arrested in Phoenix in the past year.

In May, Phoenix police named 23-year-old Aaron Saucedo as the alleged “Serial Street Shooter,” a man responsibl­e for 12 shootings and nine deaths. Saucedo is awaiting trial while being held at Maricopa County’s Fourth Avenue Jail.

The shooting victims

The shooting victims included people of varied demographi­cs. They were younger and older adults; men and women; and black, white and Hispanic in race and ethnicity.

Here are the victims Phoenix police say they have tied to Cooksey to date:

❚ Nov. 27: Andrew “Andy” Remillard, 27, 16th Street and Indian School Road, Phoenix.

❚ Nov. 27: Parker Smith, 21, 16th Street and Indian School Road, Phoenix. Remillard and Smith were gunned down in a parking lot in the late-night hours of Nov. 27. Police have not yet determined a motive for the shooting and are unaware of how Cooksey may have come into contact with the two friends.

❚ Dec. 2: Salim Richards, 35, 4000 block of 44th Avenue, Phoenix. Officers found Richards critically wounded when they arrived about 7:45 p.m. He later died at the scene.

❚ Dec. 11: Jesus Bonifacio Real, 25, 500 block of East Harrison Drive, Avondale. Real is the brother of Cooksey’s ex-girlfriend, police said.

❚ Dec. 13: LaTorrie Beckford, 29, 5000 block of North 55th Avenue, Glendale. Police said he was shot twice and found near a parking lot between two buildings

near Camelback Road and 55th Avenue. He died at the scene.

❚ Dec. 15: Kristopher Cameron, 21, 6000 block of North 58th Avenue, Glendale. Cameron was found kneeling in a grassy field in the area of the 5000 block of North 58th Avenue in Glendale. He died a day later. The shooting occurred in an area about a mile from where Beckford was shot to death 48 hours earlier.

❚ Dec. 16: Maria Villanueva, 43, body discovered at the 1700 block of South Third Avenue, Phoenix. Police said Villanueva was abducted from her Glendale apartment the day earlier, sexually assaulted and murdered. Police say Villanueva met with Cooksey as she was pulling into her complex and got into the car with him. Officials have found no indication the two knew each other beforehand.

❚ Dec. 17: Rene Cooksey, 56, 1300 block of East Highland Avenue, Phoenix.

❚ Dec. 17: Edward Nunn, 54, 1300 block of East Highland Avenue, Phoenix. Rene Cooksey and Nunn, Cleophus Cooksey’s mother and stepfather, were gunned down in their home. Police responded to a shots-fired call and discovered the younger Cooksey at the residence. He was arrested at the scene.

In and out of custody

Cooksey only recently began living his life as a free man. His criminal history stretches back to when he was a juvenile, with the most serious previous offense occurring in 2001, when he was convicted of manslaught­er at 18 years old.

According to court records, Cooksey and four accomplice­s were robbing a Phoenix topless bar at gunpoint when the bar manager fatally shot an accomplice.

Cooksey initially was charged with first-degree murder under the felony murder rule, which allows for a defendant to face the most serious of charges in a death that occurred in the commission of a felony. In Arizona, a defendant can be found guilty of felony murder even if he did not mean to kill someone or wasn’t the actual killer.

Cooksey pleaded guilty in 2001 to the lesser charge of manslaught­er. A pre-sentencing report that year from the manslaught­er conviction struck an ominous tone about the young man’s behavior.

“(Cooksey’s) record is characteri­zed by recidivism and by escalation in the serious and dangerous nature of the offenses,” his probation officer stated, noting Cooksey’s juvenile record and the extreme physical abuse he endured growing up. “The pattern of criminal behavior leads to the conclusion that the defendant is a very dangerous individual.”

He was sentenced to 16 years in prison, records show. But the wrongdoing didn’t stop once he was behind bars.

Cooksey walked into prison Nov. 14, 2001. Five months later, he was found guilty of drug possession in prison, the first of at least 22 violations he would be found guilty of during the ensuing 15 years, according to records from the Arizona Department of Correction­s reviewed by The Arizona Republic.

He was found guilty of nine other “major violations” that ranged from fighting in 2008 to assaulting prison staff in 2011, the last disciplina­ry infraction noted before his first release from prison to community supervisio­n a few years later, in January 2015.

He was charged with a DUI in November 2015, records show. That’s about the same time he started rapping.

With a YouTube account under his name, Cooksey dubbed himself King Playbola and began recording himself rapping about women and drugs, all while a track droned on in the background. The handful of dimly lit videos — most with a few dozen views as of Thursday morning — feature Cooksey on a couch, performing in front of the camera.

The videos were posted between November 2015 and January 2016. A 93-second clip is especially haunting in light of recent allegation­s. King Playbola I do I do ill Iller than the rest of ’em Go ask the rest of ’em I chopped at the rest of ’em Murdered all the best of ’em Nothing left of ’em.

One video published on his account shows him rapping about “murder in my thoughts” while wearing a blue bandanna, on its face a seemingly irrelevant detail. But witnesses described the man near one of the homicide scenes wearing a similar bandanna, and police later recovered a garment matching that descriptio­n at Cooksey’s residence.

Investigat­ors reference the YouTube clip in court records.

Asked about the videos at Thursday’s news conference, Phoenix police said Cooksey was an “aspiring music star.”

Cooksey was rearrested in May 2016 on a technical violation and returned to prison pending further court proceeding­s. He was released June 30, 2016, and absconded from supervisio­n two months later, said Bill Lamoreaux, an Arizona Department of Correction­s spokesman.

That spurred another arrest warrant and a December 2016 booking into a Maricopa County jail. Cooksey was transferre­d back to the Department of Correction­s until the initial manslaught­er sentence was completed last summer.

He was released July 28.

A difficult childhood

Cooksey was born on March 25, 1982, the grandson of Tucson-based civil-rights leader Roy L. Cooksey. The elder Cooksey formed the Afro-American Coordinati­on Committee there in 1960 and met Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X on several occasions, according to a 2009 Arizona Daily Star article.

Cleophus Cooksey’s pre-sentencing report states that he was raised by his biological parents until their separation when he was 12. Cooksey said his childhood was marked by “frequent physical confrontat­ions,” both between his parents and directed toward him.

He left home when he was 16, Cooksey told the probation officer, and from that point until his 2001 arrest had been living with his girlfriend. At the time, Cooksey admitted a daily use of marijuana and occasional use of PCP.

The report states that Cooksey’s father committed serious physical abuse against his son, and after one incident when he was 12, the younger Cooksey was hospitaliz­ed. Attempts to reach Cooksey’s biological father were unsuccessf­ul.

In a Dec. 19 interview described in court records, an Avondale officer asked Cooksey if he was aware of the killing of Jesus Real.

“Yeah. There was a, something happened. Um. Yeah, I remember …” he replied, pausing for a moment while shaking his head up and down, investigat­ors wrote.

“I don’t remember much, but, um. Somebody said you guys wanted, there was something about. You guys never found anybody,” he continued.

Cooksey denied knowing the name of the person slain — Real — at which point the investigat­or reminded Cooksey he had stayed with his girlfriend at the apartment where the killing happened. “Yeah, I remember that,” Cooksey said, according to court records. “I should, I should probably talk to my lawyer, right?”

He stopped talking to the Avondale officer. On Jan. 9, he talked to Phoenix officers investigat­ing the other killings. Cooksey denied having committed any murders, though he admitted to being near certain crime-scene locations — corroborat­ing cellphone GPS data obtained by investigat­ors.

Phoenix police are still seeking informatio­n on these homicides and any others that may be connected to Cooksey. Investigat­ors don’t know for certain there are more, but that remains “absolutely a distinct possibilit­y,” Howard said Thursday, requesting the public’s assistance for any and all additional informatio­n, no matter how seemingly small.

“We are already receiving calls from new witnesses,” he said. “We want to continue with that trend.”

Anyone with informatio­n is urged to call the Phoenix Police Department or Silent Witness at 480-WITNESS. You also can leave a tip online, by visiting the Silent Witness website, or contact a local law-enforcemen­t agency.

 ??  ?? Salim Richards, 35
Salim Richards, 35
 ??  ?? Jesus Bonifacio Real, 25
Jesus Bonifacio Real, 25
 ??  ?? Kristopher Cameron, 21
Kristopher Cameron, 21
 ??  ?? Edward Nunn, 54
Edward Nunn, 54
 ??  ?? Maria Villanueva, 43
Maria Villanueva, 43
 ??  ?? Andrew Remillard, 27
Andrew Remillard, 27
 ??  ?? Parker Smith, 21
Parker Smith, 21
 ??  ?? Latorrie Beckford, 29
Latorrie Beckford, 29
 ??  ?? Rene Cooksey, 56
Rene Cooksey, 56
 ??  ?? Cleophus Cooksey Jr.
Cleophus Cooksey Jr.

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