Man Suspected of Shooting Deputies Surrenders

A man suspected of shooting two sheriff's deputies and another person, then taunting snipers to make him a martyr before barricading himself in a makeshift bunker was arrested Saturday after a 22-hour standoff with law enforcement in Odessa, authorities said.

Victor White, 55, surrendered himself outside his trailer in Odessa, said Texas Department of Public Safety spokesman John Barton. Earlier, White got inside a sheriff's vehicle and used the radio to urge snipers to make him a martyr.

The two Ector County deputies were hospitalized in stable condition and the other man, who went to trailer in some kind of property dispute, was treated and released, authorities said.

Throughout the standoff, White sporadically opened fire on a DPS helicopter and on officers from a large dirt mound that contained trenches, bunkers and fighting positions, Barton said. The barricade, which had a white cross and flagpole on top, was built near the trailer where White lived with no utility connections on property that covers several acres.

The shootings happened Friday afternoon when Luke Bedrick went to the property with Deputy Ricky Tijerina and Sgt. Steve McNeil. Barton said he wasn't sure why the deputies went with Bedrick. A call to the Ector County Sheriff's Department was not immediately returned.

"It was a service call for some kind of dispute, something to do with vehicles or a water well," Barton said.

Barton said White began firing and struck all three men. When they retreated for cover, White got into a sheriff's department truck and began making threats on the radio, Barton said.

"He got on the radio and basically was spouting off things about the deputies and law enforcement, making political and religious statements and making comments urging the snipers to make him a martyr," Barton said.

Barton said White has connections to white supremacist organizations and longtime links to the Republic of Texas, which asserts Texas is an independent nation whose government was reactivated in 2005 after 163 years of dormancy.

The standoff lasted overnight, and the suspect continued shooting at a police helicopter Saturday morning, sheriff's Sgt. Gary Duesler said.

There were between 100 and 150 officers at the scene, "from the FBI all the way down to the dog catcher," he said.

Duesler said the suspect was well known in the area to be anti-law enforcement.

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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