The Mercury News

Soldier charged with killing wife, trooper

- By Chris Carola The Associated Press

A New York state police trooper responding to reports of gunfire was shot to death by a soldier who had just killed his wife at their home near his Army base, authoritie­s said Monday.

Trooper Joel Davis was approachin­g the couple’s home in rural Theresa, near the Canadian border, when Staff Sgt. Justin Walters shot him in the torso with a rifle, leaving him in a roadside ditch, police and court documents said.

Another trooper arrived and found Davis, who died about an hour later at a hospital.

Walters’ wife, Nichole Walters, was found dead in the driveway, with multiple gunshot wounds. A female friend of hers, who was living on the property, also was shot, suffering non-lifethreat­ening injuries, police said.

Davis, 36, had been a state police trooper for four years, after 10 years as a county sheriff’s deputy in the area, police and friends said.

“He truly did love being a law enforcemen­t officer,” family friend Chris Fletcher said. “One of his last texts to another one of his cousins was he couldn’t believe he got paid to do what he does.”

Gov. Andrew Cuomo said “the entire New York family grieves” for Davis, a married father of three teenagers who was commission­er of a youth baseball league in his tight-knit community.

State police Superinten­dent George P. Beach II noted that signs had already sprung up around the area to pay tribute to Davis.

“It’s not just the police who suffer a loss like this,” Beach said.

Justin Walters, 32, was barefoot and clad only in shorts when he was taken to a town court around 4 a.m. Monday to be charged with murder.

He was in an orange jail uniform and shackles when he was re-arraigned Monday evening in LeRay Town Court, where he was ordered held without bail for grand jury action.

His assigned lawyer, Eric Swartz, waived a preliminar­y hearing. He said the next appearance would be in Jefferson County Court later. He wouldn’t comment further, saying he had only met Walters minutes before court.

Walters, a native of Zeeland, Michigan, joined the Army in 2007 and did two one-year tours in Afghanista­n, in 2009 and again from March 2011 to March 2012, Army officials said. He was stationed at Fort Drum, home of the 10th Mountain Division.

Fort Drum’s senior commander, Maj. Gen. Walter E. Piatt, called the slain trooper a hero.

“It takes an uncommon valor to run toward acts of terrible violence, to sacrifice for the safety of strangers,” Piatt said.

Cuomo, a Democrat, called Davis’ death “yet another sad reminder of the risks law enforcemen­t officers face each day.”

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