Advertisement

Slain dad taught son, 8, to shoot

Share via
Fonseca is a writer for the Associated Press.

A man who police believe was shot and killed by his 8-year-old son had consulted a Roman Catholic priest about whether the boy should handle guns and had taught him how to use a rifle, the clergyman said Saturday.

The father, Vincent Romero, 29, was from a family of avid hunters and wanted to make sure the boy wasn’t afraid of guns, said the Very Rev. John Paul Sauter of St. Johns Catholic Church. The boy’s stepmother had suggested he have a BB gun, the priest said.

Romero taught his son how to use a rifle to kill prairie dogs, Sauter said.

Police say the boy used a .22-caliber rifle Wednesday to kill his father and another man, Timothy Romans, 39, of San Carlos.

Advertisement

The priest did not say how he advised the couple, but said Saturday that the boy “was just too young.”

“That child, I don’t think he knows what he did, and it was brutal,” Sauter said.

The boy, who faces two counts of premeditated murder, did not act on the spur of the moment, St. Johns Police Chief Roy Melnick said. Police are looking into whether he might have been abused.

“I’m not accusing anybody of anything at this point,” Melnick said Saturday. “But we’re certainly going to look at the abuse part of this. He’s 8 years old. He just doesn’t decide one day that he’s going to shoot his father and shoot his father’s friend for no reason. Something led up to this.”

Advertisement

The boy’s father and stepmother had gotten married in September, said Sauter, who presided over the wedding.

Romero had full custody of the child. The boy’s mother had visited the previous weekend from Mississippi and returned to Arizona after the shootings, said Apache County Attorney Brad Carlyon.

On Friday, a judge ordered a psychological evaluation of the boy. Under Arizona law, charges can be filed against anyone 8 or older.

Advertisement

The boy had no record of complaints with Arizona Child Protective Services, Carlyon said.

“He had no record of any kind, not even a disciplinary record at school,” he said. “He has never been in trouble before.”

In a sign of the emotional and legal complexities of the case, police are pushing to have the boy tried as an adult even as they investigate possible abuse, Melnick said. If convicted as a minor, the boy could be sent to juvenile detention until he turns 18.

“We’re going to use every avenue of the law that’s available to us, but we’re also looking at the human side,” Melnick said.

The boy’s lawyer, Benjamin Brewer, said his client is generally in good spirits. “He’s scared,” he said. “He’s trying to be tough, but he’s scared.”

Officers arrived at Romero’s home within minutes of the shooting Wednesday in St. Johns, which is 170 miles northeast of Phoenix and has a population of about 4,000. They found one victim just outside the front door and the other dead in an upstairs room.

Romans had been renting a room at the Romero house, prosecutors said. Both men were employees of a construction company working at a power plant near St. Johns.

Advertisement

The boy went to a neighbor’s house and said he “believed that his father was dead,” Carlyon said.

Melnick said police got a confession, but Brewer said police overreached in questioning the boy without representation from a parent or attorney and did not advise him of his rights.

Advertisement