3 soldiers arrested in fellow soldier's stabbing death
updated 4:38 PM EDT, Mon October 7, 2013
Soldier served abroad, killed at home
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- It now appears the stabbing was not racially motivated, police say
- The suspects, like the victim, were soldiers assigned to Joint Base Lewis-McChord
- Friends say they were on the way to celebrate Tevin Geike's pending discharge
- Witnesses initially said Geike was attacked after an assailant yelled about soldiers being white
Jeremiah Hill, 23;
Cedarium Johnson, 21; and Ajoni Runnion-Bareford, 21, were arrested on
charges of murder in the death Saturday of Army Spc. Tevin Geike, police
said Monday.
All four were assigned to
Joint Base Lewis-McChord, not far from the Lakewood sidewalk where
police say Geike was accosted as he walked with two friends and fellow
soldiers early Saturday.
Police initially said
they were investigating the death as a possible hate crime after
witnesses said a black assailant directed a racial comment toward Geike,
who was white, and his white friends shortly before the stabbings.
But interviews with all
involved now lead investigators to believe that race was not a
motivating factor, Lakewood police said Monday, without elaborating.
Geike, 20, of
Summerville, South Carolina, was walking along a Lakewood street with
two fellow soldiers after 2 a.m. Saturday when a car carrying five black
men passed, with one of the occupants yelling a comment about the three
being white, police initially said.
One of Geike's companions, Brian Johnson, told CNN affiliate KIRO that someone in the car yelled "something like 'white' and 'cracker.' "
The other friend, Matthew Barnes, told KIRO that he yelled back: "So this is how we treat combat veterans now?"
The vehicle turned around and stopped, and five black men got out, police said.
The groups exchanged words, but the five began retreating once they realized they were all soldiers, police said.
But Hill stabbed Geike
-- and cut himself in the process -- before they left, authorities said,
citing one of Hill's companions who police said they interviewed.
Barnes said Geike died in his arms.
"I'm sitting here
holding him, trying to stop the bleeding with my right hand and calling
911 in my left, trying ... to get them here," Barnes told KIRO. "Right before I got off the phone, I couldn't feel a heartbeat anymore, and he was gone."
Geike, Barnes and Brian
Johnson were on their way to a celebration of Geike's upcoming discharge
from the Army, Barnes told KIRO.
Suspect asked for first aid, police say
Police said they made
the arrests after Hill asked a fellow soldier for help mending his hand
for a knife wound. That soldier, claiming Hill told him he wounded the
hand when he killed someone, told a sergeant, police said.
According to police,
Hill told the sergeant he injured the hand while cutting vegetables.
Hill eventually went to a hospital, where he claimed he hurt the hand
while cutting parachute cord, police said.
The sergeant went to
police. Later, investigators identified and talked to a man who was
among the five in the car. That man told investigators that Hill had
bear-hugged Geike and pushed him to the ground, and that Hill was
covered in blood when he got into the car, police said.
The five sped away and
got rid of the knife, police said, citing the unidentified witness. A
second person corroborated the witness's account, according to police.
Police didn't say how Cedarium Johnson or Runnion-Bareford were involved.
They also didn't say why
they don't believe the incident was racially motivated, except to cite
interviews from "everyone involved." Hill did not talk to investigators,
who still do not know why the stabbing happened, police said.
Geike, an aviation operations specialist, joined the Army in October 2010 and arrived at Joint Base Lewis-McChord in April 2011.
Hill, Cedarium Johnson
and Runnion-Bareford, as well as their two companions, were assigned to a
combat infantry unit at the base, police said.
By Sunday, friends of
Geike had placed flowers, a balloon and a sign on a sidewalk where the
stabbing happened. Barnes said Geike was a good man and a great soldier.
"They were looking for
trouble," Barnes told KIRO of the assailants. "They were looking for
someone to attack. And we just happened to be in the wrong place at the
wrong time.
No comments:
Post a Comment