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Army veteran tried helping a stranded driver — a hitman who'd been hired to kill him, cops say

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Army veteran tried helping a stranded driver — a hitman who'd been hired to kill him, cops say


When Carlos Cruz-Echevarria was found dead along the side of a Deltona road inNovember, Volusia County detectives believed he was a good Samaritan, randomly shot as he tried helping a stranded driver.

An investigation soon revealed that the story went much deeper. The stranded driver whom Cruz-Echevarria, 60, tried helping was actually a hitman hired to kill him, Sheriff Mike Chitwood said.

On Thursday, the sheriff announced the arrests of three people suspected of Cruz-Echevarria’s murder. Investigators say the Army veteran was targeted and executed to prevent him from testifying in a road-rage case.

“I’ve been a cop for 32 years,” Chitwood said during a news conference Thursday. “This is one of the most heinous, despicable, cowardly acts I’ve ever witnessed.”

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Kelsey McFoley (Volusia County Sheriff's Office)

Cruz-Echevarria was found shot multiple times in the head near a disabled, stolen car that was stuck in the grass near Malaga Avenue and Purtian Street on Nov. 11, 2017. His truck was stolen and later found burned in Apopka, sheriff’s spokesman Andrew Gant said.

The seemingly random slaying left his family reeling. They described him as a gentle animal lover who raised exotic birds. He made life “so much more rich and beautiful just for being himself,” his niece wrote in a statement shortly after his death.

Officials say the series of events that led to Cruz-Echevarria’s death began May 2, 2017. He was driving in Deltona when he honked at a vehicle that was stopped at a green light.

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Benjamin Bascom (Volusia County Sheriff's Office)

Deputies say the driver of the other car, Kelsey Terrance McFoley, 28, pulled up next to Cruz-Echevarria at another intersection. McFoley pulled out a gun and asked Cruz-Echevarria if he had a problem, authorities said.

Cruz-Echevarria was able to write down McFoley’s tag number. By the end of the month, investigators identified McFoley as a suspect in the road-rage case. He was arrested June 1, 2017.

McFoley, a convicted felon with more than two dozen previous charges, knew he would have faced a severe prison sentence had he been convicted of the crime, Capt. Brian Henderson said.

He said McFoley was willing to do anything to avoid prison.

On Oct. 23 — about three weeks before Cruz-Echevarria’s death, McFoley’s attorney filed a court notice indicating Cruz-Echevarria was set to testify against McFoley in December, authorities said. It included Cruz-Echevarria’s home address.

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Melissa Rios Roque (Volusia County Sheriff's Office)

Henderson said McFoley hired Benjamin Bascom, 24, to kill Cruz-Echevarria. Bascom went to Cruz-Echevarria’s house Nov. 11, but he wasn’t there. Bascom around the neighborhood, waiting for Cruz-Echevarria to arrive, investigators said.

“They were actually stalking the victim,” Henderson said. “They were there to murder him.”

While turning around in the street, Bascom accidentally got his car stuck in a ditch. A driver pulled up behind Bascom and offered to help.

It was Cruz-Echevarria.

Henderson said Cruz-Echevarria bent over to get a better look at the car. Then Bascom shot him in the head several times.

The killing went unsolved for months, and the charges against McFoley in the road-rage case were eventually dropped.

But DNA evidence linked Bascom to both vehicles, while phone records tied him to the scene of the murder and the area where Cruz-Echevarria’s truck was found, deputies said. The records also indicated that McFoley spoke with Bascom on the phone and gave him instructions on how to carry out the murder, authorities said.

On Tuesday, McFoley and his girlfriend, Melissa Rios Roque — whom officials say conspired with McFoley and Bascom to commit the murder — were arrested. McFoley was captured by U.S. Marshals in Orlando. Roque was arrested by Volusia County detectives on Interstate 4.

The next day, Orlando police officers captured Bascom at Orlando International Airport, where he was about to board a plane to Texas.

All three suspects face charges of first-degree murder.

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Carlos Cruz-Echevarria (Volusia County Sheriff's Office)
Michael Williams can be reached at [email protected], 407-420-5022 or @michaeldamianw.
 
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Quite a story.... it's hard to be a Good Samaritan in today's world, put your self at risk every time you leave the house
 
All for what? A douchebag was distracted & didn't immediately 'go' when a light turned green. Guy toots his horn to wake him up, and gets (eventually) killed for it. People suck

They do. Tooting your horn should not be a capital offense but is that 2 or 3 seconds really that important?
 
System is broken. Convicted felon with two dozen previous charges? Obviously deterrence and rehabilitation aren't working for people like him. He should of been rotting away somewhere never to see the light of day.

Pressure needs to be applied to the correct people. Judges, DAs need to be held accountable for their part in this. They're living the good life while good peoples lives are being ruined by animals.
 
System is broken. Convicted felon with two dozen previous charges? Obviously deterrence and rehabilitation aren't working for people like him. He should of been rotting away somewhere never to see the light of day.

Pressure needs to be applied to the correct people. Judges, DAs need to be held accountable for their part in this. They're living the good life while good peoples lives are being ruined by animals.
They are pretty strict in Volusia co.

This dirtball was on his last step before prison, where even a brandishing type charge was putting him in a cage for a while.
Now all 3 dirtbags will be in cages.

That’s some good police work.
 
They are pretty strict in Volusia co.

This dirtball was on his last step before prison, where even a brandishing type charge was putting him in a cage for a while.
Now all 3 dirtbags will be in cages.

That’s some good police work.
TBH, I have no idea what Volusia co. is like or whether this guy is a transplant who has been racking up a record a mile long somewhere else and finally managed to step in shit in the wrong county. To me, the fact that a guy has that type of record and is still out and about with the general population means there is something drastically wrong with the system. It seems like cops on the street do a halfway decent job of apprehending criminals (with their hands tied behind their backs from higher ups) but its all down hill from there. Maybe if this deal with minor crimes being ignored by DA's catches on, they can find more room to lock up violent criminals away, I wont hold my breath though.
 
TBH, I have no idea what Volusia co. is like or whether this guy is a transplant who has been racking up a record a mile long somewhere else and finally managed to step in shit in the wrong county. To me, the fact that a guy has that type of record and is still out and about with the general population means there is something drastically wrong with the system. It seems like cops on the street do a halfway decent job of apprehending criminals (with their hands tied behind their backs from higher ups) but its all down hill from there. Maybe if this deal with minor crimes being ignored by DA's catches on, they can find more room to lock up violent criminals away, I wont hold my breath though.
Down south is a whole other world when it comes to court judgments ,bond bail, ect they hand out jail time and high bond for things that ma. Judges would give personal recognizance and a small fine for.
 
They say 15% are neurotic and 2-3% psychotic. In a 60mi commute from MHT to BOS I must drive near dozens of deranged people just waiting to go off the deep end. I don’t honk or gesture at anyone.
 
They say 15% are neurotic and 2-3% psychotic. In a 60mi commute from MHT to BOS I must drive near dozens of deranged people just waiting to go off the deep end. I don’t honk or gesture at anyone.

That's ok. I do it enough for both of us.. and maybe a couple of other people too.
 
Animals. They should be on the end of a rope for all to see by lunch tomorrow. But for the libtards among us they would.

What a screwed up country this has become. What kind of place allows a career criminal walks the streets, possesses an illegal fire arm and threatens people with it? And because he is a life long thug, piece of human shit, he commits cold blooded, premeditated murder to avoid justice.
But if a good man defends himself when some f***in animal points a gun at him, he risks everything. His freedom, financial ruin, and national shaming by a corrupt, liberal media. There was a time when if a man drew on you, the correct response was to blow his f***ing head off.
Liberalism is a disease more deadly than the plague.
 
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