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Waddell Buddhist temple shooting

Coordinates: 33°31′50″N 112°25′47″W / 33.53064°N 112.42979°W / 33.53064; -112.42979
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Arizona Buddhist temple shooting
LocationWaddell, Arizona, United States
Date1991 (1991)
TargetBuddhists
Attack type
Mass shooting, mass murder
Weapons
Deaths9
PerpetratorsJonathan Doody, Alessandro Garcia
MotiveRobbery

The Waddell Buddhist temple shooting took place in 1991 when nine people were robbed and murdered at the Wat Promkunaram Buddhist Temple in Waddell, Arizona. Their bodies were found on August 10, 1991. The shooting is considered the worst massacre in Arizona's history.[1]

Investigation

The victims were all linked to the temple and either Thais or of Thai descent: Pairuch Kanthong, the abbott; five monks, Surichai Anuttaro, Boochuay Chaiyarach, Chalerm Chantapim, Siang Ginggaeo, and Somsak Sopha; a nun, Foy Sripanpasert; her nephew, Matthew Miller, who was a novice monk; and a temple employee, Chirasak Chirapong.[2]

After the shooting, four men from Tucson, referred to as the "Tucson Four", were initially charged with the crime and gave confessions, but later recanted and were exonerated when it was discovered they had nothing to do with the crime.[1][3] Subsequently, the police found the murder weapon, a .22-caliber rifle, in the car of a friend of 17-year-old Jonathan Doody, leading the investigation to Doody and 16-year-old Alessandro Garcia. According to Garcia, he and Doody went with the .22-caliber rifle and his 20-gauge shotgun to the temple and robbed it. Garcia claimed that Doody then shot all of the victims in the head with the rifle, while Garcia shot four of them in the body with the shotgun.[3][2] The crime had been planned in advance and leaving no witnesses was part of it, according to Garcia.[3]

Both men were charged with the crime of armed robbery and first-degree murder and convicted in 1994, Doody by a jury and Garcia by a plea deal. Both received several lifetimes in prison.[1][4] On the basis that his confession had been improperly obtained, Doody's conviction was overturned in 2008 by the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals and again in 2011.[2][2] The U.S. Supreme Court upheld the decision of the Circuit Court.

Doody's second trial resulted in a mistrial in 2013.[1]

The third trial concluded in January 2014 and found Doody guilty on all counts, including the nine murders. The jury based its findings on Garcia's testimony and circumstantial evidence. Doody was sentenced to 281 years in prison.[4]

References

  1. ^ a b c d Laurie Merrill, Miguel Otarola (October 24, 2013). "Judge declares mistrial in temple killings retrial of Johnathan Doody". azcentral/ The Arizona Republic. Retrieved June 19, 2015.
  2. ^ a b c d Michael Kiefer (January 23, 2014). "Jurors find Johnathan Doody guilty in Buddhist temple massacre". azcentral/The Arizona Republic. Retrieved June 19, 2015.
  3. ^ a b c Laughlin Laura, (January 7, 1993). "Youth Pleads Guilty to Buddhist Massacre : Murder: He agrees to testify against accomplice in deal that spares him the death penalty. Slayings in Phoenix temple had been well-planned". Los Angelos Times. Retrieved June 19, 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link)
  4. ^ a b David Schwartz (March 14, 2014). "Arizona man gets nine life terms for Buddhist temple murders". Reuters. Retrieved June 19, 2015.

33°31′50″N 112°25′47″W / 33.53064°N 112.42979°W / 33.53064; -112.42979