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Fatal Westminster road rage shooting stemmed from woman pulling over for emergency vehicle

Posted at 5:08 AM, Oct 06, 2018
and last updated 2018-10-06 07:08:43-04

WESTMINSTER – The man accused of opening fire on a mother and her sons while they were walking into a dentist’s office appeared in an Adams County courtroom Friday. 23-year old Jeremy Webster was stoic during a preliminary hearing as first responders described the horrific scene they encountered in that Westminster parking lot the afternoon of June 14th.

Webster is charged with murder, attempted murder and assault for the violent incident that left 13-year-old Vaughn Bigelow Jr. dead. His mother, 41-year-old Meghan Bigelow, and brother, 8-year-old Asa Bigelow, were seriously wounded in the attack, which prosecutors said stemmed from a road rage incident moments before. A third child, 12-year-old Cooper Bigelow, was uninjured.

Another man, 40-year-old John Gale, was shot while he was sitting in his car with his daughter waiting for her dental appointment at one of the two offices near West 80th Avenue and Sheridan Boulevard.

Testimony from the preliminary hearing painted a more detailed picture of what happened before and after the suspect allegedly opened fire on multiple strangers.

Westminster Det. Bernard Vonfeldt recounted an interview with Cooper Bigelow, who said his mom was taking him and his brothers to the dentist’s office when they saw an emergency vehicle behind them on Sheridan.

Vonfeldt said Cooper Bigelow told investigators that his mom tried to pull over, but that there was a black sedan in the right lane. The man driving that car wouldn’t let her move over and swore at his mother.

Later, Vonfeldt said Meghan and Cooper Bigelow told him they realized the same vehicle followed them into the parking lot of the Cedarwood Square Office Complex at 5150 W. 80th Avenue. Cooper Bigelow said his mom took out her phone and shot a picture of the suspect’s black Toyota Corolla, which ultimately led to an arrest.

Vonfeldt said Cooper Bigelow told investigators his mom started walking into the dentist’s office with him and his brothers when the gunman came up behind them. Gale, who watched the whole thing from the front window of his vehicle, told investigators that the suspect was holding a gun, according to Vonfeldt’s testimony.

Vonfeldt said Cooper Bigelow would later run into the dentist’s office and yell “my mom is getting shot!”

Gale told Vonfeldt that he saw the suspect walk back toward his vehicle, and thought it was so he could reload. He said the gunman walked back toward where Meghan Bigelow had been shot, and then made eye contact with him.

Investigators said Gale recounted the gunman firing at his vehicle multiple times, and that he was shot in the arm. Gale said he tried to back up, but that it was difficult because Meghan Bigelow was on the ground right next to his truck. Ultimately, Vonfeldt said Gale told investigators he maneuvered backward and into a pole, hoping it would be a distraction.

Gale would then get his 8-year-old daughter out of the backseat and run with her into a dentist’s office for cover.

Vonfeldt said a man he spoke to who was inside the dentist’s office at the time said he watched the gunman walk over to a boy who was hunched in the nearby grass and shoot him “execution-style.”

Vonfeldt said officers were able to track the suspect vehicle seen on Meghan Bigelow’s phone as belonging to Webster and asked other law enforcement agencies to be on the lookout.

He was taken into custody on I-25 near Castle Rock that afternoon and was apparently headed back to his home in Colorado Springs.

According to an arrest affidavit released this summer, Webster admitted to the shooting and said he had mental health issues and had changed his medication that day. A psychiatrist later confirmed to Vonfeldt that Webster was diagnosed with bipolar disorder, and prescribed an anti-depressant and anti-psychotic.

Vonfeldt said investigators found a 9 mm Glock in the back of his vehicle when he was taken into custody.