Advertisement

‘Come kill me’: Videos show gunman shouting at officers in New Mexico shooting rampage

Handwritten note by gunman
Police in New Mexico say a handwritten note was found on an 18-year-old high school student who killed three women in a shooting rampage.
(Farmington Police Department)
Share via

Videos released of this week’s deadly shooting rampage in northwest New Mexico recorded a voice said to be the 18-year-old gunman’s urging police to “kill me” and officers rushing toward him before they fatally shot him outside a church.

“He is yelling on the Ring footage, ‘Come kill me,’” Farmington Police Chief Steve Hebbe said Thursday of Beau Wilson, the high school senior who authorities say killed three women during the attack.

“He’s making a stand, he has opportunities to run off, he does not use those opportunities,” Hebbe said. “So yes, it’s my belief that ultimately in his head, he has made the decision that he is going to stand and fight it out until he is killed.”

Advertisement

The three women killed Monday included a mother and daughter who happened to be driving through the neighborhood. The victims were identified as longtime Farmington residents Gwendolyn Dean Schofield, 97, her 73-year-old daughter, Melody Ivie, and 79-year-old Shirley Voita.

At least six other people were wounded in the shootings, which sent waves of grief through the community of 50,000 people. They included two police officers, who have been released from medical care.

Hebbe’s comments mirrored an account from witness Candi Brammell, who lives next to the church and told the Associated Press in an interview Tuesday that the gunman seemed to be egging police on, saying, “Come on!”

Kern County authorities have released few details about the shooting, and the victims’ relatives said they’ve been given no updates, left to wonder what happened.

May 17, 2023

Brammell said she couldn’t believe what she was seeing as Wilson opened fire. Within an instant, he was exchanging shots with the police and then was down in the grass.

Wilson lived with his father in a home that contained an arsenal of weapons and ammunition, apparently legally owned, according to law enforcement authorities. He bought an assault-style rifle last year after he turned 18.

On Monday, police say, he began shooting indiscriminately with the rifle from the front porch area of the home.

Advertisement

The first person hit was Voita, a retired school nurse who was driving by. Video released by police showed her car rolling down the street with the door open after she managed to get out.

Police in New Mexico say the homes or offices of five elected Democratic officials in the Albuquerque area have been buffeted by gunfire over the last month.

Jan. 6, 2023

Video also showed the path of a vehicle carrying Schofield and Ivie, who stopped to help. Schofield was a teacher her entire career, and Ivie followed in her footsteps by running a preschool for 40 years.

“They see something in the road, which turns out to be [Voita], and they’re in the process of pulling over” when another hail of gunfire erupts, Hebbe said, narrating the images. “At that time, we believe all those rounds are fired from [the rifle].”

Police say Wilson soon dropped the weapon into some bushes even though it still held more live ammunition.

Wilson then walked down the street for about a quarter-mile, spraying bullets indiscriminately using two pistols. He discharged a .22-caliber gun and then depleted rounds from a 9-millimeter weapon in the final shootout with police, during which he fired at least 18 rounds.

Gun violence and mass shootings could prevent many overseas fans from attending games in the United States during the 2026 FIFA World Cup.

May 16, 2023

He wore what appeared to be a modified protective vest with steel plates, but authorities say he discarded the vest before the shootout with police.

Advertisement

Police body-camera video showed the perspective of one officer walking and running down the middle of the residential street, readying an assault rifle in one hand while barking commands into a radio in the other. On the run, he takes cues from a resident and a dog runs beside them.

That video is later partially obscured, but a shadow on the ground shows the officer bracing in firing position for the final confrontation.

“I have eyes on the suspect. He’s walking south. He’s wearing all black,” an officer tells dispatchers in another video segment.

He then yells, “Farmington police! Let’s see your hands!“

A police car speeds by with flashing lights and sirens.

Video from the body camera of Sgt. Rachel Discenza showed her pointing her handgun toward where the suspect was standing. Amid an exchange of gunfire, she falls to the ground and says: “I’m shot.“

She struggles unsuccessfully to get up, and a fellow officer uses her belt as a tourniquet.

Feng Feng Lee and most of the hundreds of others at Sunday’s commemoration spoke in the Taiwanese dialect, as they typically do during church services. The gunman, according to prosecutors, hated them for that.

May 15, 2023

“We got one hit. Get me a medic here for Sarge,“ he yells.

In the grass in front of the church, officers rush to the suspect after the gunfire subsides, telling him not to move. One officer cuffs him, while another says, “Subject is down. He is secured.”

A note was later found in the pocket of the discarded vest that said, “If your reading this im the end of the chapter.”

The gunman’s body was left in the grass for a time as investigators worked the scene, and it was unclear then how many times he was shot.

Buffalo, N.Y., pauses to mark one year since a white supremacist gunman killed 10 Black people and wounded three at a supermarket.

May 14, 2023

Police said earlier this week that they couldn’t say how many gunshot wounds the victims had suffered and were waiting on the medical investigator’s report, which had not been made public as of Thursday.

Advertisement

Neighbor Bryan Brown, who was among those who ran to render first aid, told the AP that Voita had gunshot wounds to the leg and the head.

Relatives of the three slain women said each had left an indelible mark that would continue to shape the lives of others.

“In immeasurable ways, this heart-wrenching incident has impacted not only our family, but those of the Voita and Wilson families,” the Schofield and Ivie family said Thursday in a statement. “We have a shared grief and ask for continued prayers and privacy as we embody the faith, grace and love of our mother and grandmother and embark on a path of healing and forgiveness.”

In 2023, 115 people have died in 22 mass killings. Experts point to lax gun laws; politicians’ inability or unwillingness to change, violence in U.S. culture.

May 8, 2023

Police have been looking for motivations behind Monday’s rampage, which took place the day before Wilson was due to graduate from high school, amid some indications from relatives of prior mental health issues.

Efforts were underway by authorities to access medical and school records that might shed light on his mental history.

Advertisement