San Antonio Express-News

Two more SAPD officers tied to June shooting

- By Gabriella Ybarra STAFF WRITER

A San Antonio police officer was fired and another suspended after they failed to respond to a call that resulted in the death of Melissa Perez in June.

Lt. Steven Velasquez was given an indefinite suspension after he left his shift four hours early that fateful night in June without prior authorizat­ion, according to police disciplina­ry records. Indefinite suspension is another way of saying an officer was fired.

“Lieutenant Velasquez was not attentive to his duties when he failed to make the scene of an officer-involved shooting as the highest ranking member assigned to the South Patrol service area,” disciplina­ry records state.

Sgt. Paul Rodriguez was given a seven-day suspension after he changed out of his uniform and left the police station 45 minutes early the same night. Rodriguez’s disciplina­ry records mention the shooting but do not state if he was supposed to respond to the call.

Last month, two former SAPD officers, Sgt. Alfred Flores and Eleazar Alejandro, were indicted by a Bexar County grand jury on a murder charge in the death of 46-year-old Melissa Perez. They were also charged with aggravated assault by a public servant, aggravated assault by a public servant with a deadly weapon, manslaught­er and deadly conduct.

A third officer, Nathaniel Villalobos, was charged with aggravated assault with a deadly weapon and deadly conduct.

Flores, Alejandro and Villalobos are accused of shooting into Perez’s apartment after she allegedly threw a glass candlestic­k at an officer and rushed toward police with a hammer. Family members of Perez said she had schizophre­nia.

All three officers were suspended immediatel­y, pending the outcome of the charges. However, disciplina­ry records show that Flores and Villalobos were for violating department rules on Dec. 6.

Officers responded to the Rosemont at Miller’s Pond apartments around 12:30 a.m. June 23 after a neighbor called 911 to report that Perez had cut the wires to the complex’s fire alarm system. Initially, Perez cooperated with officers but grew upset after police asked her to walk to their patrol car. She ran to her apartment and locked the door.

Flores and Villalobos jumped over the back patio railing, where officers communicat­ed with Perez. Flores and another officer tried to enter the apartment through the patio door.

Disciplina­ry records state that Flores “failed to use sound judgment” by directing officers to breach the apartment and attempt to arrest Perez.

At some point, Perez charged “toward the closed patio door while swinging the hammer,” striking the window, according to records.

Flores, Alejandro and Villalobos fired between 12 and 16 rounds at Perez, hitting her twice, according to investigat­ors. She was pronounced dead at the scene.

Disciplina­ry records state that she did not pose a threat and was “separated from the officers by a closed door and an open window blocked by a television.” All three officers were arrested on the day of the shooting.

Mcmanus said the officers’ actions “were not consistent with SAPD’S policy and training,”

 ?? William Luther/staff file photo ?? Alexis Tovar, center, with husband Adrian and aunt Daisy Nieto, shows a photo of mother, Melissa Perez, on June 25.
William Luther/staff file photo Alexis Tovar, center, with husband Adrian and aunt Daisy Nieto, shows a photo of mother, Melissa Perez, on June 25.
 ?? San Antonio Police Department ?? Sgt. Alfred Flores, left, and officers Eleazar Alejandro and Nathaniel Villalobos are charged in the June shooting.
San Antonio Police Department Sgt. Alfred Flores, left, and officers Eleazar Alejandro and Nathaniel Villalobos are charged in the June shooting.

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