Shooting Suspects Got Ride From Ohio Trooper

July 31, 2013
Ohio State Police officials are investigating whether Sgt. Jeffrey Shane violated and policies.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Two teenagers charged in a pair of fatal shootings were given a ride to the scene of another non-fatal shooting by an Ohio state trooper who did not pat them down or check them for warrants after he found them walking along a highway ramp, authorities said.

The young men, ages 17 and 18, were charged Tuesday with the death of a teenager whose body was found last week on a sidewalk in Columbus, not far from the convenience store when they are accused of having killed a clerk a day earlier. They are also being questioned in the non-fatal shooting Saturday at a truck stop west of Columbus where the trooper dropped them off.

Sgt. Jeffrey Shane, a 29-year-member of the State Patrol, has been placed on administrative desk duty during an internal investigation to determine whether he violated any policies, patrol Lt. Anne Ralston has said.

The suspects — Nathaniel Brunner, 18, of Columbus, and a 17-year-old, also from Columbus — were arrested Saturday in Dayton on warrants charging them with murder in the slaying of store clerk Imran Ashgar on Wednesday night.

They were charged Tuesday with murder in the slaying of Lamont Frazier, 17, Columbus police said. Police said Frazier's body was found early Thursday on a sidewalk in Columbus, a few hours after Ashgar was slain.

Court records don't show an attorney for Brunner, whose bail in the Ashgar case was set Tuesday at $1.5 million. It was not immediately clear whether prosecutors would seek to charge the 17-year-old as an adult.

The teens had been walking Saturday along a ramp at Route 42 and Interstate 70, the patrol has said. Patrol log information released Tuesday notes Shane was with an abandoned car on the interstate about 2:06 a.m. and out with the suspects on the ramp about 2:12 a.m., dropping them off at the nearby truck stop a few minutes afterward.

Authorities have said that the motorist at the truck stop was shot a little over two hours later.

The abandoned car appears to be the vehicle the suspects had been driving, Ralston confirmed Tuesday.

Normal procedure calls for troopers to pat down anyone being given a courtesy ride in a patrol car and check their names for any outstanding warrants, but it appears that didn't happen, Ralston has said.

Messages left for the sheriff in Madison County, home to the truck stop, to determine whether charges had been filed in the shooting there were not returned.

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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