Prosecutors say the man charged with fatally shooting a sheriff's deputy at a Houston-area gas station fired his weapon at the victim a total of 15 times, including in the back of the head.
Shannon Miles, who is charged in the capital murder of 47-year-old Deputy Darren Goforth, was in a Texas district court Monday and is being held without bond. Harris County District Attorney Devon Anderson did not comment on a motive but said Miles used a .40 pistol during the encounter.
"The gun holds 14 in its magazine and one in the chamber. Fifteen shell casings. You can do the math," Anderson told reporters following the court proceedings. "He unloaded the entire pistol into Deputy Goforth."
According to the Associated Press, Anderson read the probable cause statement in court Monday saying authorities first received a call at 8:20 p.m. Friday. When law enforcement arrived at the gas station in the Houston suburb of Cypress, they discovered Goforth face down, already dead.
As NPR's Scott Neuman reported Sunday, law enforcement is calling Goforth's killing a "cold-blooded execution."
Anderson said according the surveillance video from the gas station, a black male with a bald head gets out of his vehicle and approaches the deputy from behind.
Miles is black, Goforth is white.
"He runs up behind Deputy Goforth and puts a gun to the back of his head and shoots." Anderson said. "Deputy Goforth hits the ground and then he continues to unload his gun, shooting repeatedly into the back of Deputy Goforth."
Anderson said ballistic tests from the shell casings at the crime scene matched the .40 caliber pistol found at Miles' home.
The Houston Chronicle reports Deputy Goforth was remembered in a well-attended gathering Sunday at the gas station where he was gunned down. Over 1,000 people turned up to pay their respects.
Goforth was a 10-year veteran of the force.
Copyright 2015 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.