Wwhhyy!!?? Police shoot, kill man who stomped baby to death

Mod's Note:

Thread's moved to the proper location.

Anyway, Yes it's unfortunate to see something like this to happen. IMO, The police did the right thing by shooting the man who beated and stomped the baby to death. If the police didn't shoot him, the man would have continue to beat the baby far more worse than he originally had been to do so. It's sad but yet, appalling because the baby didn't deserve this.
 
That is a terribly sad story. I can't imagine why someone would do that.
 
I saw it on the news.It is a very sad story,I wonder why if other people saw it why they didn't do anything about it?I would have got my baseball bat out of my trunk(I carry one all the time in my car) and try to help that baby.
 
Far out, that is a terrible sad story. Poor baby had to suffered through this.
 
I saw it on the news.It is a very sad story,I wonder why if other people saw it why they didn't do anything about it?I would have got my baseball bat out of my trunk(I carry one all the time in my car) and try to help that baby.


either My monster truck will run over him and save baby! :mad:
 
:jaw: Poor child !

:squint: @ that man who stomped this child. I am glad the police shot that man until he dropped dead. That's good! That child don't deserve stomping or beating.
 
i saw that on news today, OMG!, he's way out of control. :crazy: world everyday. oh, boy!.
the baby is so innocent.
 
Goodness, poor infant. :(

This man qualification for death penalty. The electric chair will do it.
 
I saw it on the news.It is a very sad story,I wonder why if other people saw it why they didn't do anything about it?I would have got my baseball bat out of my trunk(I carry one all the time in my car) and try to help that baby.

Because they would be afraid to get involved and that he was possibly a very dangerous man.
 
:jaw: I'm total speechless... I feel sick in my heart after read those article.

I feel for poor baby... :tears: It make me :pissed: to see that monster to stomp baby like that...
 
Update:

Man witnessed beating toddler to death near Modesto identified
By Dana Hull and Kelli Phillips
Bay Area News Group
Article Created: 06/16/2008 02:39:18 PM PDT

Authorities identified the Turlock man eyewitnesses saw punch and stomp a toddler to death on a darkened country road before being fatally shot by police as Sergio Casian Aguilar, the Stanislaus County Sheriff's Department announced today.

The toddler is believed to be Aguilar's 2-year-old son, according to the sheriff department's news release.

Eyewitnesses reported coming upon Aguilar attacking the boy on Saturday night. They tried to stop him as he swung and slammed the child into the asphalt behind his parked four-door Toyota pickup.

Investigators spent Father's Day trying to understand and cope with the savage attack on Bradbury Road, 10 miles west of Turlock near cow pastures and dairy farms.

The boy's beating left police and rescue workers badly shaken, said Deputy Royjindar Singh. "Why would somebody do this?" Singh said.

"In the shadows and light it looked like he had hit an animal," said Dan Robinson, chief of the Crows Landing Volunteer Fire Department, who came upon the chaos driving home from a late dinner in Turlock, in an interview with the Modesto Bee. "As we backed up again, I could see that he had blood on his arms. I could see that it was a small child."

Robinson jumped from his vehicle and confronted the man, who lunged at him. Robinson said the man wasn't screaming and wasn't loud, but was forceful, saying "demons" were in the boy.

"Give me the knife. Give me the knife," the man said as he grabbed for a pen in
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the fireman's front pocket.

"There was a total hollowness in his eyes," Robinson said, "like I could see right through to the back of his head."

An elderly couple was first on the scene, calling 911 about 10:15 p.m. to describe the terror unfolding before their eyes.

The man ripped the child out of a car seat in the back of a pickup truck, threw him to the ground and kicked and stomped him against the pavement, witnesses told deputies. At least three people yelled at the man and attempted to pull him off the boy, but were brushed back by the attacker.

Coroner's deputies believe they know the boy's name, but "due to the severity of his injuries making a visual identification is nearly impossible," Singh said.

The coroner's office will use DNA to confirm that the boy was Aguilar's son, according to the sheriff office's release. DNA samples were taken from Aguilar, the boy and the boy's mother.

Although DNA results can take up to six weeks to process, the coroner is pushing to get the results back in this case within a week.

A Stanislaus County sheriff's helicopter flying in the area on another matter arrived about six minutes after the initial 911 call.

Officers in the helicopter could see the man beating a child on the road. Because patrol deputies were still several minutes away, they decided to land in a field near the man's vehicle, Singh said.

The helicopter's tactical flight officer, a Modesto police officer, ran toward the suspect with his gun drawn, but he was unable to reach the roadway because of an electric and barbed wire fence, Singh said.

"When the flight officer first contacted the suspect and tried to get him to stop, the infant was on the ground and the suspect was kicking and stomping the child," Singh said. "The officer demanded that the man stop, but he just continued his assault."

The officer, who has not been identified, then shot the man, who was pronounced dead at the scene. The toddler was taken to Emanuel Medical Center in Turlock, where he was pronounced dead shortly after arrival.

"Some of the key questions we're trying to answer is why this happened?" Singh said. "What was going on before the suspect left? Where was he going? Where had he been? What was going on in his life that day?"

Stanislaus County Sheriff Adam Christianson sent department employees an e-mail Sunday offering assistance to any staff member affected by the incident, Singh said.

"It does hit home, especially for the deputies with children and those officers in the helicopter that attempted to save the boy's life," he said. "This is one of the more violent scenes they've ever seen. It involves a victim who is defenseless and helpless. And it's Father's Day."

Nurse Isabelle Thomas, who lives a few hundred yards from the scene, was working at Emanuel Medical Center when her son called her with word something bad had happened. Soon she heard of the little boy who died 500 yards from her front door.

"I couldn't go to sleep," she said. "I couldn't rest without seeing it and all that blood. I couldn't believe all that blood."
Man witnessed beating toddler to death near Modesto identified - Inside Bay Area

Picture here:
Police identify man who beat toddler - CNN.com
 
Another update:

What led Turlock man to fatally beat toddler son?
06/17/08 16:49:16

Investigators struggled Tuesday to explain why a 27-year-old man with no criminal record and no apparent signs of mental illness savagely beat his toddler son to death on a dark country road.

Sergio Casian Aguiar, who worked at a supermarket in Turlock, was fatally shot by police Saturday night after he refused to stop attacking his 2-year-old son, according to the Stanislaus County Sheriff's Department.

Aguiar's wife, Frances Liliana Casian, a kindergarten teacher, told detectives that she didn't know why Aguiar would brutally beat their child and said he didn't have any mental illness that she knew about, according to sheriff's spokesman, Royjindar Singh. Casian and Aguiar had been separated.

Results from toxicology tests to determine if Aguiar was drunk or on drugs are expected in about four weeks.

Detectives have been interviewing friends, neighbors and family members, but they still haven't found an explanation for the grisly killing, Singh said Tuesday.

"As of now, there's still no reason why he did this," Singh said. "Nobody said his behavior was strange at all. He was normal as far as they knew him."

Aguiar had immigrated from Mexico, and family members will be traveling from abroad to make funeral arrangements and meet with Stanislaus County investigators, Singh said.

The boy was staying with his father over the weekend because his mother was out of town. Aguiar didn't tell his roommate where he and his son were going when he left their house Saturday night, Singh said.

"We may never know why the suspect beat that child to death," Stanislaus County Sheriff Adam Christianson told The Modesto Bee. "We hope to find out, but it's going to take a lot more work."

Witnesses said they saw Aguiar stomping, kicking and punching the toddler next to his pickup truck, which was parked on a remote, unlit road in rural Stanislaus County around 10 p.m. Saturday.

Deborah McKain, 51, who lives in nearby Crows Landing, and her boyfriend, Dan Robinson, were driving on West Bradbury Road, just outside the San Joaquin Valley town of Turlock, when they spotted Aguiar on the roadside.

She told the San Francisco Chronicle that at first she thought he was "kicking garbage or something," but soon realized he was attacking a child. She said the child looked like a "rag doll," unconscious with his clothes falling off. She estimated that she saw him kick or stomp the boy at least 100 times.

Robinson, a volunteer fire chief in Crows Landing, and at least one other man tried to pull Aguiar away from the boy, but the suspect kept attacking the toddler.

Robinson told reporters that "there was a total hollowness in his eyes" and that Aguiar spoke calmly when he said he was beating the "demons" out of the boy. At one point Aguiar asked Robinson for a knife.

Minutes after at least three 911 calls were placed - at 10:19 p.m. - officers in a sheriff's helicopter landed in a nearby cow pasture. Modesto Police Officer Jerry Ramar jumped out, ran across a field to an electrified fence next to the road and ordered Aguiar to stop.

"Put your hands up. Step away from the baby," Ramar said, according to Singh.

When Aguiar stuck out his middle finger and kept kicking the boy, Ramar fired his gun, killing the suspect with a shot in the forehead.

Two deputies tried unsuccessfully to perform CPR on the boy before he was rushed to Emanuel Medical Center in Turlock, where he was pronounced dead.

Ramar, who has been a law enforcement officer for more than six years, has been placed on paid administrative leave, a routine response for officer-involved shootings.

Because the boy was beaten beyond recognition, investigators plan to use DNA tests to confirm that the toddler was Aguiar's son. They also plan to test blood that was found inside the cab of Aguiar's Toyota pickup, said Christianson.

"This event didn't start at Bradbury Road. The blood and other evidence leads us to believe the suspect may have ended up there, but the crime really started someplace else," Christianson told the Bee. "That child probably suffered fatal injuries before the motorists arrived on the scene."

Aguiar worked at a 24-hour FoodMaxx in Turlock, where he was described as a good employee, according to a company spokesman.

Ronda Donner, manager of the Mulberry Mobile Park in Turlock, where the family lived for a few years before they moved last year, said she was "blown away" by the news.

"Nice, no trouble. Their rent was always paid on time," Donner told the Chronicle. "I'm still kind of shocked. He didn't seem like that kind of person."

Authorities said they had previously misspelled the perpetrator's name as Aguilar.
FresnoBee.com: California: What led Turlock man to fatally beat toddler son?
 
Thanks for update.. Oh my Gawd!! :cry: got it from your second update.. Thanks! Oh Geez!!!! :(:(
 
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