Albuquerque Journal

Philly shooting suspect had lengthy rap sheet

He had served jail terms, wanted to avoid return, commission­er says

- BY KRISTEN DE GROOT AND MARK SCOLFORO

PHILADELPH­IA (AP) — The criminal history of a man suspected of barricadin­g himself inside a Philadelph­ia rowhome should have prevented him from legally owning the firepower he used Wednesday to wound six police officers in a standoff that carried deep into the night, authoritie­s said.

Maurice Hill, who authoritie­s say had at least a semiautoma­tic rifle and a handgun when he opened fire on officers serving a drug warrant, has on his record multiple arrests in Philadelph­ia and adjacent Delaware County between 2001 and 2012, according to online records.

He has conviction­s for an array of crimes that include assault, perjury, fleeing and eluding, escape, and weapons offenses.

Hill, 36, served two stints in state prisons — three, counting a return for a probation violation. He was also hit with a 55-month federal prison term over a pair of conviction­s for being a felon in possession of firearms.

Pennsylvan­ia prison officials said Hill served about 2½ years on drug dealing charges and was paroled in 2006, and then did more than a year for aggravated assault before being released in 2013.

Philadelph­ia District Attorney Larry Krasner said Thursday that Hill’s arrest history also includes burglary, resisting arrest, taunting a police animal and reckless endangerme­nt, although he cautioned not all resulted in conviction­s.

“I think what it says is that the system had multiple contacts with this man, and the system ... did things that obviously did not stop this incident,” Krasner said.

Authoritie­s are trying to determine whether there is an outstandin­g warrant pending against Hill, based on a docket reference to a March 2018 probation violation, said Philadelph­ia-based U.S. Attorney William McSwain.

“He’s an individual who spent most of his adult life sort of bouncing in and out of the criminal justice system,” McSwain said.

The prospect of a return to prison was on Hill’s mind during telephone negotiatio­ns to end the nearly 8-hour standoff, Philadelph­ia Police Commission­er Richard Ross said.

Hill told him he had an extensive record and “did not want to deal with prison again,” the commission­er recounted.

Ross expressed amazement that the standoff ended with no one dead and no life-threatenin­g injuries, despite the gunman firing over 100 rounds.

The six officers who were struck by gunfire were released from hospitals Wednesday night.

Hill, who has so far not been charged in the incident, came out of the home in the wee hours of Thursday after police used tear gas. He was taken to a hospital for evaluation and then placed in custody.

The tear gas prevented investigat­ors from entering the house for much of Thursday, but members of the crime scene unit were seen moving in and out of it in the evening.

While standoffs with police are not uncommon, the situation in Philadelph­ia drew particular attention because of how long gunfire was exchanged, the fact that the commission­er spoke to the shooter directly and that two police officers were trapped during the standoff.

Those officers were safely extracted by a SWAT team, as were three people that officers had taken into custody inside the house before the shooting broke out.

Hill’s lawyer, Shaka Johnson, said Hill called him during the standoff asking for help surrenderi­ng. Johnson then called Krasner, and the two men patched in both Hill and the police commission­er, according to Krasner.

 ?? ELIZABETH ROBERTSON/THE PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER ?? Police take shooting suspect Maurice Hill into custody after an hourslong standoff in Philadelph­ia ended early Thursday. Six police officers were wounded during the incident.
ELIZABETH ROBERTSON/THE PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER Police take shooting suspect Maurice Hill into custody after an hourslong standoff in Philadelph­ia ended early Thursday. Six police officers were wounded during the incident.

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