By BOB JOHNSON and JOHNNY CLARK
Associated Press
AUBURN, Ala. (AP) - The man
suspected in a weekend party shooting that killed three people and
wounded three others was previously arrested on charges involving guns
and twice sued for child support, according to court records.
Authorities were searching
Monday for Desmonte Leonard, 22, of Montgomery, who is accused of
opening fire Saturday night at an apartment complex near Auburn
University after getting into a fight with some of the victims over a
woman. He faces three counts of capital murder.
Two of those slain were former players for the school's powerhouse football program.
Auburn Police Chief Tommy Dawson
said Leonard fled the scene in a white Chevrolet that he abandoned on
the way back to Montgomery, about 55 miles away. They believed he was in
the Montgomery area.
Court records show Montgomery
police arrested Leonard in 2008 on a charge of carrying a pistol without
a license, after stopping a suspected stolen vehicle and finding him
inside. Documents available online didn't show whether the case was ever
resolved, but Leonard was freed on bond within days.
Leonard was charged in 2009 with
assault after allegedly shooting a man in the groin, but prosecutors
dropped the case after the victim told authorities Leonard wasn't the
shooter.
A Montgomery woman filed a
paternity suit against Leonard on Friday that identified him as the
father of a girl who turned 1 last month.
Another woman sued him in 2009
seeking unpaid child support for a girl who is now 4. A court ordered
monthly payments of $305 by Leonard, who records show was working at a
Walmart store at the time.
Auburn police said the weekend
shootings didn't appear to have anything to do with some of the victims
being former or current players on the football team, which won the
national championship in 2010.
"The only connection that the
Auburn football team has to this is they are victims of a brutal
shooting. Sometimes the young men get a bad rap, I feel like, but they
are the victims today," Dawson said.
Of the three wounded victims,
John Robertson remained in critical condition after being shot in the
head. Xavier Moss was released from the hospital. The third wounded
victim was Eric Mack, a current football player who is expected to
recover.
Slain were Edward Christian, who
had to quit the team because of a lingering back injury, and Ladarious
Phillips, who had previously quit playing football. The other person
killed was 20-year-old Demario Pitts.
Dawson said he did not know why the party was being held or what started the fight.
Turquorius Vines, 23, said he
was at the party Saturday evening at the University Heights apartments
with one of his friend, Pitts. He said he and his friend were approached
by two other men who started arguing with them over a woman.
Vines said he punched one of the
men, while Pitts hit both of the men over the head with a bottle.
Either one or both of the two men then started shooting, he said. He
said Pitts was shot and killed, while two others also were hit by
gunfire. Vines said he had never met the men he was arguing with.
"It's like I lost a lung," Vines said of losing his friend. "I don't know how I'm going to survive this."
Several emergency vehicles
converged overnight around the University Heights apartment complex
where many students live. The building was swathed in yellow police
tape.
The apartment complex was the scene of another shooting in April.
In that shooting, a man armed
with an assault rifle allegedly opened fire on a police tactical team as
officers carried out a search warrant. No one was hurt, but officer
seized weapons, cash and a pound of marijuana.
Police identified the alleged
shooter in the April gunfire as a 21-year-old man, who was charged with
four counts of attempted murder and drug possession. Three other men
were arrested on drug charges.
Mack, the player wounded in
Saturday's shooting, is a junior offensive lineman from St. Matthews,
S.C. He played in five games last season. Coach Gene Chizik said Mack
was expected to recover.
___
Associated Press writer Jay Reeves contributed to this report.
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2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not
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