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By BILLY TOWNSEND
The Tampa Tribune
LAKELAND - The shoulder-to-shoulder line of Central Florida SWAT officers, organized in closely linked teams of 10 or 11, stretched for hundreds of feet and slowly crept north toward Interstate 4.
Carrying MP5 submachine guns and other assault weapons, the officers hacked through vines and poked at every possible hiding place Friday in a dense patch of brush and woods that had become ground zero of the search for a man who killed a deputy.
Just after 9:30 a.m., one of the teams happened upon a large fallen oak tree. Dug in beneath it they found the man accused of ambushing and killing Deputy Matt Williams and his K-9 partner Diogi on Thursday.
“They were pretty much on top of him before they could see him,” Sheriff Grady Judd said.
In a flash, what probably was the most intensive manhunt in Polk County history reached its climax.
One officer, who hasn’t been identified, ordered the suspect to show his hands, Judd said. The suspect showed just one hand.
Then someone saw a gun in the other, and nine of 10 members of the team opened fire, killing the man in place with “numerous” shots, Judd said. It was less than 100 yards from where Williams and Diogi were killed.
The suspect had his right hand on Williams’ 45-caliber semiautomatic service handgun, investigators said.
About a half-mile away, at the command post near Kathleen High School, police radios began to crackle, and the news spread fast.
At one point Judd was heard on the radio saying, “Search is over. Suspect Signal Seven.” That’s police language for dead.
A cheer went up.
Within moments, Judd arrived to tell reporters, announcing, “God will be the judge and jury this time.”
2 Days, 2 Names
But who is the man upon whom the verdict was rendered?
The sheriff’s office provided a second possible identity for him in as many days.
Judd said detectives are certain that a man arrested in Polk County in 1999 under the name Angilo Freeland, 27, is the same man killed under the tree Friday.
They do not know if that’s the name on his birth certificate or the one he used most often. Angilo Freeland has ties to several Lakeland addresses, investigators said. None seems current.
A different name, Eswardo O. Ramclaim, was provided Thursday night - with warnings that it probably was bogus. It was the name the man gave Deputy Douglas Speirs when he stopped him for speeding at 10th Street and Wabash Avenue in north Lakeland.
Freeland was arrested in 1999 by the Florida Highway Patrol on charges that he had no driver’s license, fled from officers and had a concealed weapon.
The charges echo the circumstances of Thursday’s 11:45 a.m. traffic stop, from which Freeland bolted into a nearby wooded area.
By late afternoon Friday, crime scene technicians were working closely over Freeland’s body, which was to be sent to the medical examiner’s office. Judd said he expects a better identification to emerge.
In the meantime, Judd said, detectives are developing a picture of who Freeland was. They found no drugs in the rental car he was driving, but they think he has ties to a drug ring.
And Judd said two cell phones he dropped and a “book of associates” detectives found are providing a number of leads.
The Ambush
Judd provided more details Friday about what might have happened in the woods when Speirs, Williams and Diogi went in after Freeland as other deputies ringed the area.
It appears Williams and Diogi tracked Freeland almost too successfully and that the dense vegetation worked to their disadvantage.
“They had run him into an area so thick that he couldn’t move,” Judd said.
With nowhere left to run, Freeland holed up behind a tree in much the same fashion that he did Friday morning. And then he struck in what Judd called “an ambush.” Judd said Williams and Diogi were too good at their jobs to have been overcome by anything other than an ambush.
Detectives think Freeland used a 9 mm Taurus handgun to kill Williams and his dog. That gun also was found on Freeland after he was killed. Detectives still are not saying where Williams was hit, but they have said he was struck with several shots and likely died instantly.
Speirs was wounded in the leg shortly afterward in an exchange of fire, and the shooter fled.
Speirs was treated at a Lakeland hospital Thursday but not admitted. It wasn’t immediately clear which weapon Freeland used on Speirs or when he took Williams’ weapon.
However he did it, Freeland managed to kill a seasoned deputy and his highly trained K-9, take his gun and ammunition, wound another deputy and successfully elude capture in a fairly confined space for almost 24 hours.
It shows a capability of cool, tactical thinking, sheriff’s officials said.
“It makes you wonder,” said Gary Hester, sheriff’s office chief of staff, when asked whether detectives think Freeland might have received formal military training of some kind.
Hester said there is no evidence of that. But he said one source in the investigation says Freeland might have trained informally at a Lakeland gun range.
A Violent, Vital Confrontation
Judd said Friday that the key to getting Freeland was how quickly deputies and police officers sealed off both the wooded area and the wider swath of north Lakeland that remained locked down throughout the manhunt.
It helped that deputies were on scene backing up the search for Freeland when the shooting started.
Judd singled out the Lakeland Police Department for praise. He cited the agency’s quick arrival at Interstate 4, cutting Freeland’s access to the north.
He said two Lakeland police officers who exchanged gunfire with Freeland just after the deputies were shot might have staved off a worse crisis. They forced him back into the woods and away from an elderly couple’s home at 1446 Wabash Ave., the very northern end of the road.
“He would have got in there and hurt that couple and got himself a car,” Hester said.
On Friday, Paul Prebor, 76, the owner of the home, casually retold his brush with death and showed off bullet marks - one coming, one going - in the eaves of his outdoor laundry room and shed near the rear of his house.
Nearby, sheriff’s administrators picked up spent canisters of tear gas that still gave off enough odor to make eyes water. Officers had used them Thursday, thinking Freeland might have run from the gunfire into the house as Prebor and his wife fled.
The Prebors live several hundred yards north of the site of the traffic stop and even closer to the spot where Freeland was killed.
Paul Prebor said he didn’t hear the shooting of the deputies, but he quickly noticed the commotion that followed and came out to see what was going on. He saw officers with guns drawn telling him to go back inside, where his wife was, and lock his doors.
After a few moments informing neighbors, Prebor was preparing to go inside when Lakeland policeofficers Jeff Birdwell, a detective, and Jose Bosque pulled up.
They got out, Prebor said, and one asked a strange question: “Does that black man in your backyard have any reason to be there?”
‘He Was Tall’
Rather than answer, Prebor, who was facing away from his backyard, said he instinctively turned. He saw Freeland, gun drawn, run into the covered opening of the shed, step in front of a barbecue grill and open fire at him and the officers. They were standing about 75 yards away, near the street.
Prebor said he thinks Freeland fired twice and that the officers quickly fired twice in return. Lakeland police spokesman Jack Gillen, who identified the officers, said both got off rounds, but he did not know how many.
All the shots, from both sides, missed. Freeland bolted back into the Prebors’ backyard. Prebor rushed to retrieve his wife, who was in the kitchen behind an open window, and take her across the street to a neighbor’s home.
Prebor said he saw Freeland for about three seconds.
“It happened so fast, I didn’t have time to be scared. I’m not that emotional about things,” he said.
His impression of Freeland? “I thought he was tall.”
That’s accurate. Freeland’s Polk arrest record lists him at 6-foot-2. At least one of his bullets struck the inside eave of the shed on its way out, splintering wood and perhaps altering the path of the bullet.
Though officers weren’t able to nab or kill Freeland there, they managed to push him away from the area where he might most easily have found hostages and likely back into the brush, sheriff’s officials said.
“We felt confident that he hadn’t gotten out of there,” Hester said. “We felt he was pinned down.”
They were confident enough that Thursday night the SWAT leaders from the various agencies on scene began to plan the meticulous search of the woods that would find Freeland on Friday morning.
They would find and kill him within sight of Prebor’s home.
Editor Dave Nicholson contributed to this report. Reporter Billy Townsend can be reached at (863) 284-1409 or wtownsend@tampatrib.com.
UNFOLDING EVENTS
Thursday
11:45 a.m.: Deputy Douglas Speirs pulls over a driver for speeding at 10th Street and Wabash Avenue. The driver runs into dense woods northwest of the traffic stop scene. Backup deputies arrive to surround the area. After several minutes, Speirs, Deputy Vernon Matthew “Matt” Williams and his dog partner, Diogi, go into the woods.
12:30 p.m.: The driver fires at the deputies, killing Williams and Diogi. Speirs is wounded in the leg. The shooter flees.
About 1 p.m.: As deputies and police begin swarming the area, the man is seen in the backyard of a home at 1446 N. Wabash. He exchanges fire with two Lakeland police officers. No one is hit. The man disappears again.
4 p.m.: Polk County Sheriff Grady Judd announces Williams and Diogi are dead. A massive manhunt spreads across much of north Lakeland.
About 7 p.m.: Students from nearby Kathleen High School are taken by bus, under armed guard, to a north Lakeland church, where parents finally are allowed to pick them up.
9 p.m.: Judd gives his final briefing of the night and warns, “We’re prepared for a gunfight if he wants a gunfight.”
Friday
9:35 a.m.: A patrol of SWAT officers walking shoulder to shoulder near the scene of the shootings happens upon the driver, who had buried himself beneath a fallen tree overgrown with brush. The man raises only one hand. The officers, seeing a gun, open fire, killing the man. Moments later a cheer is heard at the law enforcement command center near Kathleen High.
9:50 a.m.: Judd announces suspect is dead. He was carrying a .45-caliber handgun thought to be Williams’ service weapon.
I hope that he rots. I pray for the family of these two police officers. This was a terrible and senseless crime!
A very tragic situation; my heart goes out to the friends and families of the brave officers. I am already steeling myself for the onslaught of “police brutality” and other lawsuits that will certainly be filed because of the inhumane treatment of this “poor man”.
Bull butter!
He died as he lived, violently. I only wish that he did not have the chance to cause so much pain to so many. May the fires below consume him forevermore.
This is not all of it, the sad story is we will see more and more of this madness as we have sown to wind in the USA…. now we reap the wirlwind. Only Jesus can and will put the pieces back together if we seek Him,otherwise get ready to see more of a society in a moral freefall to hell.
God help us as we seek your face
PRAYERS AND DEEPEST REGARDS TO THE FAMILIES.JUSTICE HAS BEEN SERVED!!
I’m glad to hear this ordeal is over with. It’s a sad day in Polk county, however a lot of people will rest easier tonight knowing this violent criminal has been dealt with. I say bravo to the the Polk County Sheriff’s Dept and all the other law enforcement personnel involved with this search. This thug deserved what he got and I’m glad that we taxpayers won’t have to pay for a trial and prison time for this piece of human trash.
Thank goodness this piece of garbage got what he had coming to him. If anybody needs proof that our immigration system and laws are outmoded, the fact that this bum was able to get in here says it all.
This is great no need to waste tax dollars on the electric chair! I hope he suffered.
This kind of action by law enforcement should occur more often. I think if it did then the criminals would think twice before committing crimes. I think Ed has it exactly right.
Excellent end result -one dead piece of crap! My condolences to the family of the fallen Officer- it doesn’t bring him back but at least they won’t have to go through the grief of watching this piece of dung be tried and end up with a too light sentence and then go on spending tax money appealling whatever sentence he got. This is true justice and the world is a slightly better place today because this thing is dead.
Sang to the tune, “The Evil Witch is Dead”, from the Wizard of Oz…., Hey, hey the punk is dead, the punk is dead, the punk is dead. Hey, hey the cowardly punk is dead!
I am formally from the Winter Haven area. I am so happy that this has come to an end. I think they should split the $40,000 between the officers that were walking thru the woods. All of them whether it be a few dollars a few hundred for each one. A JOB WELL DONE!! Thank GOD for you all of you. The families are in our thoughts and prayers. We need to celebrate all the good and safety that Deputy Williams brought to the polk County Sheriff’s office. He will be sadley missed, but he is in a way better palce that we can only talk about here. GOD BLESS EVERYONE who has helped from all over the state
Jessica, there IS something we can do. We can contact our legislators and senators and ALL our ELECTED governmental employees and tell them to comprehensively tighten laws regarding crime, gun control, and immigration. Create a comprehensive, severe and ENFORCEABLE policy—and call it “Matt’s Law”—and if the wimpy cretins in elected positions DON’T do it, we can ensure through the power of the VOTE that they don’t have a chance to NOT listen to us ever again.
Good Riddance to bad rubbish. That is about $150,000.00 saved on a trial and $70,000 per year to incarcerate this filth. I would have done it for a candy bar.
Wow - I’ve never seen such a knee-jerk, kill-em-and-let-god-sort-them-out idiot mentality on display in all my life. None of you morons know what went down with this whole incident, yet you are cheering for the death of someone. You blindly believe what the cops say happened (even though THAT isn’t even clear). This guy was essentially executed in the woods today - I see no mention that he opened fire on anybody else.
Let me get this out - I hate cops. I don’t think they’re heroes at all. Ninety-nine percent of them have well below-average intelligence and are drawn to the job because of the low level of celebrity it brings. They are the brainless high school wrestlers who then failed to achieve anything else in life and weren’t smart enough to get into college.
Heroes? Gimme a break. They perform such heroic functions as arresting prostitutes and drug users - neither of whom are harming anybody. Oh yeah - and they show up after crimes to take a report.
I am glad they got him and glad they took the cop and dog killer out! Worthless scum that won’t be on death row for 30 years at tax payer expense while the do gooders cry we are violating his civil rights. He got what he deserved!
Now that he has been killed in this shoot-out, I bet there are some local lawyers and the ACLU mad as he## that they don’t have this piece of trash to defend and claim that he was abused as a child.
Oh no the world is going down the drain due to no immigration laws, gangs, and minorities. Come on now, realistically crime in this country has been on a decline since the early 80’s. Though this is a tragedy that an officer lost his life, but the reality is these things happen. The world is not going to the dogs.
In reality this country has always had lax immigration laws, gangs, and minorities.
The real issue at hand is what caused this individual to kill an officer. What made him so desperate to commit this murder.
As a mother to a police officer I can say this , I am sooooooooooooo glad that this piece of crap is off the street. My heart goes out to the family of the officer.
WHERE IS JESSIE JACKSON AND AL SHARPTON? WHY ARENT THEY COMING TO THIS SCUM BAGS DEFENSE? THE LIKE COP KILLERS LIKE ABU JAMAL. ITS AMAZING HOW QUIET THOSE IDIOTS ARE WHEN ONE OF THESE GUYS IS ON THE LOSE. HAD HE BEEN CAPTURED THOUGH AND PUT IN JAIL, THEY WOULD BE DEFENDING HIM DOWN THE ROAD BECAUSE HE HAD A BAD CHILDHOOD OR MEAN AUNT OR BUG BITE WHEN HE WAS 7. HE IS EXACTLY WHERE HE BELONGS - IN HELL.
Congratulations to all of law enforcement that helped to bring this tragedy to a quick end
Awesome job finding this guy! This is the Justice he deserves…..My thought go out to the Family’s of the Fallen Officer.
My heart goes out to the deputy’s family. I agree that a pack of K-9s should have chewed this guy to death, but things would have been a lot easier had he just killed himself the day before this happened.
Jeff—Ohio
most excellent I pround of these law officers..they shot an evil thing…shot more please….michel oregon
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Posted by Patty McCoy, Tampa on 09/29 at 09:46 AM
God bless Grady Judd and all of the law enforcement officers for their bravery and risking their lives to save ours. It’s clear from the other comments people are mad as hell and aren’t going to take it any more. I frankly don’t care how many shots were fired to take this animal out, he obviously had no regard for life whatsoever, he sealed his own fate.