Why are there so many shooting incidents and other gun crimes on Walmart property?

Monday, June 30, 2014

Drug bust goes bad and results in law officer and suspect shot and wounded at New Jersey Walmart

Occurred April 22, 2014.
Scene of shooting at Paramus Walmart (source)



An undercover police officer, posing as a drug dealer in a sting, was with two other individuals in a car in a busy Walmart parking lot in Paramus, New Jersey, to make a $400 marijuana deal.  That's when a third individual walked up to the car and said, "Give me everything you have," then fired on the officer, wounding him in the leg and hip.

Seven backup officers quickly sped into the parking lot and fired on the suspect, hitting him in the arm and leg.

Both men were hospitalized and are expected to survive. Luckily, no one else was injured.

From an article:
According to authorities, at least five shots were fired in the shopping plaza, which includes a Marshalls and a WalMart, after 1 p.m. Tuesday, the report said.  
The officer was in his car making a marijuana purchase from one of the suspects as part of the sting drug operation, Bergen County Prosecutor Joh Molinelli said in a press conference about the shooting, NorthJersey.com reported. A second man approached him with a gun in what police believe was going to be a robbery, the report said. 
Although undercover cops are taught to give in to such demands, Molinelli said the alleged gunman, Rafael Angel Vasquez Pina, 25, of Passaic, got "aggressive," causing the officer to take his gun, the report said. 
During the subsequent scuffle between the suspects and officer, Pina was shot in the left arm and left leg, the report said. He was taken to the hospital with non-life-threatening injuries, the report said. 
Pina faces an attempted murder charge, the report said. His two alleged accomplices, Melvin Guzman, 19, of Garfield and Patrick Morel, 21, of Clifton, face first-degree charges related to the shooting, the report said. 
Molinelli said the shootout came out of what was supposed to be a relatively small $400 drug deal, the report said. As is typical in undercover investigations, the Paramus officer was not carrying a gun or badge, and was not wearing a bullet-proof vest, the report said.

Additional details HERE.

Walmart.  Save money.  Die faster.