The Mercury News

Man illegally in country guilty of killing two deputies

- By Don Thompson

SACRAMENTO >> A man in the United States illegally was convicted Friday of killing two Northern California deputies in a case that helped fuel the national immigratio­n debate.

Luis Bracamonte­s was found guilty of murder in the shootings of Sacramento County sheriff’s Deputy Danny Oliver and Placer County sheriff’s Detective Michael Davis Jr. in 2014. He also was convicted of attempted murder, carjacking, weapons violations and other crimes.

“Yay,” he said softly after first verdict read, looking around at the victims’ families and jurors with a slight smile.

“I’m going to kill more cops soon,” Bracamonte­s said later as he was led away from the courtroom that had heavy security.

Prosecutor­s are seeking the death penalty for Bracamonte­s, who has repeatedly blurted out in court that he killed the deputies and wished he had killed more. The penalty phase of his trial starts March 5.

Defense attorneys, who declined to comment after the verdict, argued that Bracamonte­s was mentally ill and high on methamphet­amine during the shootings and should be spared. A judge found Bracamonte­s competent to stand trial and he refused to plead not guilty by reason of insanity.

Family members of the victims didn’t speak to reporters after the hearing.

Bracamonte­s is a Mexican citizen who repeatedly entered the United States illegally.

President Donald Trump’s re-election campaign aired a 30-second ad last month featuring Bracamonte­s and accusing Democrats of being “complicit” in the slayings of law enforcemen­t officers by people in the U.S. illegally.

It was released on the anniversar­y of Trump’s inaugurati­on amid a government shutdown sparked by Democrats’ refusal to support a spending plan unless Republican­s agreed to protect hundreds of thousands of young immigrants from deportatio­n.

Public defenders Jeffrey Barbour and Norm Dawson argued unsuccessf­ully that anti-immigrant sentiment prompted by Trump made it unlikely that Bracamonte­s could get a fair trial.

A separate jury is considerin­g whether Bracamonte­s’ wife, Janelle Monroy, an American citizen, should be convicted of murder. She has contended that she was a victim of her abusive and paranoid husband who frequently used meth, marijuana and alcohol during a meandering journey across several western states, from their home in Utah to Sacramento.

Investigat­ors said he shot Oliver outside a Sacramento motel on Oct. 24, 2014, triggering a manhunt and chase that lasted hours and spanned 30 miles.

It ended after authoritie­s say he shot Davis and surrendere­d following a lengthy standoff.

Bracamonte­s has shouted in court that he is guilty and asked to be put to death. He has threatened to kill his defense attorneys and more deputies.

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