By
Devon Armijo Bio
Judge lambasts man charged with 4-year-old's shooting
Man confesses to I-40 road rage shooting, police say
Oct 22, 2015
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. —The man who police said confessed to killing a 4-year-old girl during a road rage incident earlier this week went before a judge Thursday afternoon. Police said Tony Torrez, 32, opened fire on a family’s truck, hitting and killing
Lilly Garcia, 4. Torrez was on the run for a day before tips from the public led police to him.
Authorities said
Torrez confessed to Lilly's murder shortly after his arrest.
Torrez has been charged with an open count of murder, aggravated battery with a deadly weapon, assault with the intent to commit a violent felony, shooting at or from a motor vehicle, child abuse, child abuse resulting in death and tampering with evidence.
‘One of the worst alleged acts in the history of the city’
Judge Chris Schultz set Torrez’s bond at $650,000 and had some harsh words for the suspected murderer. Torrez stood with his head down in court.
“This is possibly one of the most wanton and atrocious acts that's alleged, I think, in the history of this city,” Schultz said.
Newly released court documents show Garcia’s father told police a driver cut him off as he approached an Interstate 40 off-ramp on Tuesday afternoon. Alan Garcia said he made gestures and cursed at Torrez.
As he pulled away, Garcia said he heard gunshots.
“If members of the motoring public receive gunfire for a perceived slight on the highway, then I don't know who is safe,” Schultz said. “There’s no explanation. There doesn't appear to be, at least in the affidavit that I've read, any provocation that would warrant any response, anything close to this.”
The judge said he considers Torrez to be a flight risk due to numerous instances of him failing to appear in court.
Court records show Torrez has about a dozen prior felony charges, including charges from
another incident in which he was accused of pulling a gun on another driver. However, all previous felony charges against Torrez were either dismissed or dropped.
Prosecutors charged Torrez in 2006 with aggravated battery and aggravated assault with a deadly weapon. A man told investigators Torrez pulled a gun on him after an argument. The victim defended himself and was able to get Torrez in a chokehold, and the gun fired as they wrestled. Prosecutors ended up dropping the charges because the victim and a witness would not cooperate.
In
2010, police arrested Torrez for kidnapping, aggravated battery, domestic violence and child abuse. Court records show the dismissal of those charges in 2013 after the victim died from an unrelated cause.
Two earlier cases of aggravated battery were also dismissed, and a 2014 arrest for negligent use of a deadly weapon also resulted with charges being dropped.
He faces seven felonies in Lilly’s death: murder, aggravated battery with a deadly weapon, assault with the intent to commit a violent felony, shooting at or from a motor vehicle, child abuse, child abuse resulting in death and tampering with evidence.