The Arizona Republic

Man charged in son’s shooting death apparently kills self

- Michael Kiefer The Arizona Republic The Republic, The Republic

Kansas Eric Lavarnia, who was charged with child abuse in the March 2017 shooting death of his 9-year-old son, apparently ended his own life on Father’s Day, June 17.

Lavarnia, 32, had been in contact with with the intent of proving that his son’s death was accidental.

His wife, Wendy Lavarnia, is facing a murder charge in the child’s death that claims she committed child abuse by leaving a loaded handgun in reach of a younger child who may have pulled the trigger. Prosecutor­s further allege she then withheld treatment that might have saved the boy’s life by not immediatel­y calling 911.

“It was an accident,” Kansas Lavarnia told “and there was no delay in calling 911.”

He wanted to talk, he said, because “I have to clear me and my wife’s name (and) don’t want everyone thinking we’re scumbags because the cops are incompeten­t and want so badly to hang us over something we did not do.”

At about 3 p.m. on March 20, 2017, Wendy Lavarnia called 911 to report the shooting inside her Phoenix home. She said she had momentaril­y left a 9mm handgun on a bed and her 2-year-old son picked it up when she wasn’t looking and fired it, striking her son Landen in the head. Landen died at a hospital the next day.

Initially, the couple told Phoenix police that Kansas Lavarnia was out shopping and only returned home several hours later. However, he had an unexplaine­d bullet wound in his left arm and police said it looked as if he had stabbed himself with a screwdrive­r to disguise the wound.

Later, the couple said, Kansas Lavarnia had fled because he had conviction­s for drugs and burglary and could not possess firearms. He did not talk to police. His story went untold until he contacted the newspaper June 6.

Both he and Wendy Lavarnia were initially charged with first-degree murder, predicated on two child-abuse charges: that Wendy had left the gun within reach of a child and that they both had waited to call 911, delaying medical care to the injured child.

The murder charge was dropped against Kansas Lavarnia, though he still faced three child-abuse charges, one for hindering prosecutio­n and another for being a prohibited possessor. Wendy Lavarnia is still in custody, charged with murder.

Kansas Lavarnia told that he had just awakened from a nap and was groggy. He was sitting on the edge of the bed, he said, and could see Landen in front of him to his right, playing the video game “Call of Duty” on a large-screen television.

“I didn’t know there was a gun behind me,” he said. Nor did he know that his younger child was there, he said.

But a shot rang out and the bullet hit Kansas in his left arm. The bullet then shattered into fragments and exited his arm in several places, causing the wounds the police attributed to a screwdrive­r, he said. One of the fragments then struck Landen in the head.

“I started to fall forward,” he said. “I saw Landen drop.”

When he turned, he saw the younger boy holding the gun and crying.

“Wendy came running in and said, ‘What the hell happened?’ ” he said.

There was very little blood on Landen because the fragment was so small, he said. Wendy reached for Kansas’ pocket where he kept his phone.

“She called 911,” he said. “She started doing CPR.”

Then he fled.

“She left a gun out. It was stupid,” he said. “But it was an accident.”

Kansas Lavarnia was released on bond after the murder charge against him was dropped. He was working in a tire shop. In the evening of June 11, he texted a reporter.

“Did you know that Landen saved the lives of three kids through organ donation?” he asked.

He said he was proud.

“I know it’s what he would have wanted me to do,” he wrote. “It’s hard being asked that question about donating your kids’ organs, but saving another kid’s life is what any decent person should do.”

He repeatedly expressed his grief. “It’s the hardest thing I’ve ever done,” he said.

Apparently, it overwhelme­d him. Maricopa County Attorney Bill Montgomery announced his death in a press conference Tuesday morning. Lavarnia’s attorney, Jamie Jackson, also confirmed the death, saying Kansas apparently took his own life.

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