Official: Spate Of Shootings At Cars On Phoenix Freeway Is ‘Terrorism’

An Arizona Department of Transportation sign gives a hotline number for information on the recent freeway shootings as motorists pass under at the 202/I-10 intersection, Wednesday, Sept. 9, 2015 in Chandler, Ariz. Au... An Arizona Department of Transportation sign gives a hotline number for information on the recent freeway shootings as motorists pass under at the 202/I-10 intersection, Wednesday, Sept. 9, 2015 in Chandler, Ariz. Authorities are investigating nine shootings of vehicles over the past two weeks along I-10 in Phoenix. A truck's passenger window shattered on a Phoenix freeway Wednesday as Arizona authorities investigated a string of highway shootings that have rattled nerves and heightened fears of a possible serial shooter. (AP Photo/Matt York) MORE LESS
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PHOENIX (AP) — Electronic billboards flash a “shooting tips” hotline to freeway drivers. Other residents just take city streets, fearing a spate of shootings that have unnerved residents across the nation’s sixth-largest city.

There have been at least nine confirmed shootings in the last two weeks, and officials were investigating if a 10th on Wednesday was also related.

Most have been along Interstate 10 in the heart of the city. No one has been seriously hurt, although one bullet shattered a windshield and broken glass cut a 13-year-old girl.

Department of Public Safety Director Frank Milstead called the incidents “domestic terrorism crimes.”

“Anytime that you have multiple shootings against American citizens on a highway, that’s terrorism,” Milstead said. “They’re trying to frighten or kill somebody.”

His agency brought in the FBI, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms and local police to help. Authorities were conducting surveillance and deploying undercover detectives and members of the SWAT team and a gang task force.

“Ten days, nine incidents,” Milstead said at a news conference Tuesday. “This is a real and continuing threat to Arizona motorists.”

Juan Campana works at an appliance business near where many of the shootings occurred. He was surprised to look up and see helicopters over the scene of Wednesday’s shooting.

Campana said he’s not taking the freeway anymore.

“I go through the streets when I go home,” he said.

Police have been asking for the public’s help in identifying a suspect, including putting messages on freeway billboards urging people to report suspicious activity. They quadrupled the reward Tuesday to $20,000.

DPS spokesman Bart Graves said officials would not discuss the surveillance or other aspects of its investigation. Police do not know if all nine of the shootings are connected or whether a copycat might be at work.

“We’re not going to give the nuts and bolts of our investigation,” Graves said, adding that doing so “would help the bad guy.”

Investigators don’t know a possible motive for the shootings, Graves said.

Milstead said drivers are fortunate that no one has been killed or seriously hurt, but if the incidents continue, “It’s just a matter of time before there is a tragedy.”

The shootings began Aug. 29 when two vehicles were struck in a half-hour span on Interstate 10 between 19th and 59th avenues. A third vehicle was hit on the same freeway near 16th Street later that day.

A fourth vehicle was shot Aug. 31 in the same area.

On Tuesday, a passenger window on a Phoenix police sergeant’s personal car shattered while he was driving to work before dawn on I-10 between 35th and 43rd avenues, according to DPS officials. The officer was not injured. Another shooting happened nearby a minute later.

The shootings brought back memories of other random highway and roadside shootings that have occurred around the country over the past decade, most notably the sniper attacks that terrorized the nation’s capital more than a decade ago.

In other cases, a man was convicted last year of terrorism charges after opening fire on a busy Michigan highway because he believed the drivers were part of a government conspiracy against him. An Ohio man took shots at several cars and houses over several months in 2003, killing one, before being caught and sent to prison.

Law enforcement officials who helped crack the cases in Ohio and Michigan described the difficult task of nabbing a suspect in highway shooting investigations.

The efforts require a large number of officers who are ready to flood an area immediately after shots are fired, said Lt. Ron Moore, who commanded a Michigan task force that investigated the 2012 spree in which 23 vehicles were shot on or near Interstate 96.

“You have to bring all the resources you can to bear on the problem — and that’s exactly what we did,” said Moore, an officer in Wixom, Michigan.

Copyright 2015 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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