PHOENIX (AP) — Arizona authorities hope to get ballistic results back Monday to determine if a deputy sheriff fatally shot while answering a burglary call and a New Hampshire couple found dead in their car were killed by the same gunman.
Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio said investigators are examining a possible link between the shootings because similar guns are believed to have been used in both cases.
"Because of the type of weapon used up in Sedona, he could be the guy," Arpaio said.
The sheriff's office said Drew Ryan Maras, 30, is suspected of killing Deputy William Coleman, 50, at a north Phoenix medical building as the officer was answering a burglary call Sunday. A man got out of a van and opened fire and struck Coleman under his bulletproof vest.
Maras, whose address was not released, was fatally shot by other deputies who responded to the attack on Coleman.
On Friday morning, members of a Jeep club found the bodies of James Johnson of Jaffrey, N.H., and Carol Raynsford of Nelson, N.H., in their sedan at a remote turnout on Arizona 89A. Someone shot them with a .223-caliber rifle while they were parked on a highway turnout. Detectives found numerous casings from the rifle on both sides of the car.
The couple was apparently vacationing in the area and detectives are trying to trace their travels. Authorities have posted a reward and are asking anyone with information to call the sheriff's office or the county's Silent Witness program.
Investigators said they aren't sure when Johnson and Raynsford were killed.
Some callers reported seeing the car parked at the turnout on Thursday, and detectives are using receipts and other items found inside the vehicle to try to trace their steps and establish a timeline.
Coleman was a 20-year veteran. He is survived by a wife and two young children, ages 4 and 7, Arpaio said. He also has grown children in another state.
Coleman was assigned as a patrol deputy but had previously worked the sheriff's lake patrol unit.