Lodi News-Sentinel

Order prohibited man who killed Davis officer from owning guns

- By Sam Stanton and Darrell Smith

DAVIS — Kevin Douglas Limbaugh, the assailant who gunned down Davis police Officer Natalie Corona last week, was legally prohibited from possessing firearms or ammunition because of a battery case from last September, court records show.

A criminal protective order filed in Yolo County Superior Court on Sept. 24 required Limbaugh to stay away from the Cache Creek Casino Resort coworker he had sucker punched during a graveyard shift, and ordered that he “must not own, possess, buy or try to buy, receive, or otherwise obtain a firearm or ammunition.”

The order, which was to be in effect for three years, also required Limbaugh, 48, to surrender any firearms he owned within 24 hours, and he eventually turned over to police a black .223-caliber AR-15 Bushmaster rifle, court records say.

Despite the order, police said Limbaugh obtained at least two semiautoma­tic handguns in recent months — a .45-caliber and a 9 mm — and went on a rampage Thursday night that killed Corona, 22, and left bullet holes in a nearby house, a passing fire truck, a text book inside a backpack worn by a young woman and the boot heel of a firefighte­r fleeing the gunfire.

Davis police said Saturday night that they had recovered the two weapons and that they were not registered to Limbaugh. Investigat­ors do not yet know how Limbaugh obtained the weapons or how he was able to have them while under a criminal restrainin­g order, Davis Police Lt. Paul Doroshov said Monday afternoon.

“It’s still unknown,” Doroshov said from the lobby of the Davis Police Department, where bundles of flowers and hand-written condolence­s sit in the doorway and against the walls. “His having these (weapons) is illegal with a standing order, but it is possible to have unregister­ed weapons. The investigat­ion is going to shake out where these weapons were from.”

Limbaugh’s attack began Thursday night as Corona, a rookie officer who was on patrol alone, was investigat­ing a minor three-car collision near downtown Davis.

Police say Limbaugh slipped up on the scene on a bicycle, parked in the shadows and then approached Corona as she was handing a driver’s license back to one of the motorists.

Limbaugh fired over the right shoulder of the motorist, striking Corona in the neck, then walked over to her after she fell to the ground and continued firing into her.

Police say that after Limbaugh killed Corona he reloaded his handguns at least twice and went on a shooting spree around the block before retiring into a rental home he shared with roommates on E Street. He emerged twice — once wearing a ballistic vest and holding a handgun — as police surrounded the home and used loudspeake­rs ordering him to surrender.

Instead, police say he shoved a couch against the front door, then shot himself in the head.

 ?? HECTOR AMEZCUA/SACRAMENTO BEE ?? Fellow cadets from the Sacramento Police Academy pay their respects and remember Davis police officer Natalie Corona as they pay tribute to the fallen officer during a vigil on Saturday at Central Park in Davis.
HECTOR AMEZCUA/SACRAMENTO BEE Fellow cadets from the Sacramento Police Academy pay their respects and remember Davis police officer Natalie Corona as they pay tribute to the fallen officer during a vigil on Saturday at Central Park in Davis.

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