The Commercial Appeal

Woman charged in killing of Dickson deputy

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DICKSON — While a manhunt continued into the evening for a man wanted in the killing of a sheriff’s deputy Wednesday morning in rural Middle Tennessee, a woman was charged for her alleged involvemen­t in the crime.

Dickson County Sheriff Jeff Bledsoe identified the deceased deputy as 32year-old Sgt. Daniel Baker, a 10-year veteran of the department with a record of heroism who had served in the Marines.

Details about what transpired during the shooting were sparse, but the Tennessee Bureau of Investigat­ion identified the first suspect as 31-year-old Steven Wiggins, a felon with a violent criminal history spanning back more than a decade who was wanted on multiple warrants at the time of the shooting. He remains at large.

At 9:30 p.m., TBI announced that agents had arrested Erika Castro-Miles, a 38-year-old Dickson woman who had been detained earlier in the day. She is being held in the Dickson County jail on a charge of first-degree murder.

In a statement, TBI reported that Castro-Miles was an acquaintan­ce of Wiggins and investigat­ors had received informatio­n that she “participat­ed in the incident.”

Baker leaves behind a wife and daughter, Bledsoe said.

“He’s one of the guys who put his life on the line every day to keep the community safe ... he was doing that today,” Bledsoe said Wednesday.

“Not only has our agency lost a brother, but our community has lost a hero.”

The fatal event began about 7 a.m., when a male resident in the Sam Vineyard Road area off Tidwell Switch Road reported seeing a suspicious vehicle, TBI spokeswoma­n Susan Niland said.

Baker responded to the call, but after a period of time, failed to check in with dispatcher­s, said Jason Locke, acting TBI director.

The vehicle was tracked by GPS in an attempt to find it, and an officer with another agency was able to find the vehicle in a wooded area off of Bear Creek Valley Road about two miles away from the initial call, according to TBI. Baker was found dead inside. Niland said authoritie­s quickly identified Wiggins using video surveillan­ce.

Residents on Wednesday were being asked to stay inside as local law enforcemen­t agencies from across the mid-state, Tennessee Highway Patrol, FBI and U.S. Marshals searched for Wiggins.

Helicopter­s from THP and the Williamson County Sheriff’s Office were also being used in the search.

Wednesday evening, Baker’s body was escorted by a procession of law enforcemen­t vehicles to the Medical Examiner’s office in Nashville.

TBI, the lead agency in the investigat­ion, added Wiggins to its Top 10 Most Wanted list late Wednesday morning and also issued a statewide Tennessee Blue Alert. It’s similar to an AMBER Alert, but used in cases in which a law enforcemen­t officer has been killed or seriously injured in the line of duty.

Bledsoe urged Wiggins to surrender to law enforcemen­t.

“He needs to be held accountabl­e for what we know he has done,” Bledsoe said. “He has the option to do the right thing. People make mistakes, and people do things that are terrible, and this is an evil deed that he’s done, but now he can show people that there’s still something left in him by turning himself in.”

Wiggins had active warrants

At the time of the shooting, records show Wiggins had active warrants issued out of two counties, including one in Dickson County for failure to appear in Dickson County General Sessions Court stemming from February charges of possession of meth and possession of drug parapherna­lia.

The Williamson County warrant stems from a July 2016 incident at the Fairview Inn and Suites in which he held a girlfriend at knifepoint.

Wiggins’ direct family members declined to be interviewe­d on Wednesday, said Katrina McDonald, the longtime girlfriend of Wiggins’ brother, who became a de facto spokespers­on for the family. McDonald said police came to the family’s home with their guns drawn twice on Wednesday, and relatives were desperate to convince authoritie­s that they hadn’t spoken to Wiggins and don’t know where he is.

“My heart goes out to the (deputy’s) family,” McDonald said. “But we don’t really have anything to do with Steve because we don’t want him around our family. He’s not a bad guy, but he’s gotten into some bad stuff in the past couple of years. And it’s horrible what he’s done, and I don’t understand why he did it.”

Baker came from family of officers

Bledsoe asked for prayers for both the sergeant’s family and his agency.

Baker’s family, at his home in Dickson on Wednesday afternoon, requested privacy.

He came from a family of law enforcemen­t officers.

The Spring Hill Police Department on Wednesday afternoon reported that his father, Darryl Baker, is a detective at the department and his stepbrothe­r, Evan Bohn, is a Spring Hill officer.

Bledsoe said Baker’s death marks the second officer to die in the line of duty since he was elected sheriff in 2010.

On June 6, 2011, Deputy Keith Bellar witnessed a two-vehicle crash in the city of Dickson and advised dispatch of the incident. Unknown to Bellar, the accident was part of an aggravated domestic violence assault in which a husband had rammed his wife’s car off of the road. The husband exited his vehicle and immediatel­y began firing shots into the windshield of Bellar’s patrol car.

Bellar was able to return fire but was fatally injured in the process.

He was 27 years old, five days short of his 28th birthday.

TBI and the U.S. Marshals Service are offering a $12,500 reward for informatio­n leading to Wiggins’ arrest.

Anyone with informatio­n about Wiggins’ whereabout­s is asked to call law enforcemen­t at 615-446-8041 ext. 4 or 911.

Emily West, Brett Kelman and Elaina Sauber contribute­d to this story.

Reach Natalie Neysa Alund at nalund@tennessean.com and follow her on Twitter @nataliealu­nd.

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