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'This Is Like Bonnie And Clyde': 14-Year-Old Girl Wounded After Exchanging Fire With Florida Deputies
“This is like Bonnie and Clyde at 12 years old and 14 years of age,” Volusia County Sheriff Mike Chitwood said after his deputies shot the teenage girl, who had allegedly opened fire at police.
Deputies in central Florida shot and wounded a 14-year-old girl after they say she and a 12-year-old boy opened fire with a shotgun and AK-47 from a house they broke into after fleeing a juvenile home.
The girl was in stable condition after surgery, the Volusia County Sheriff’s Office said in a news release early Wednesday, and charges were pending against both juveniles in the Tuesday evening violence near Deltona. The deputies were put on administrative leave pending a review, officials said.
A visibly angry Sheriff Mike Chitwood said at a news conference late Tuesday that the juveniles had shot at officers from the house multiple times over about a half-hour while deputies tried to de-escalate the situation and, eventually, returned fire. He said this was “something I’ve never seen in 35 years in policing.”
“This is like Bonnie and Clyde at 12 years old and 14 years of age,” Chitwood said.
The juvenile home in Deltona reported the pair missing on Tuesday evening, telling authorities the boy is diabetic and needed insulin every four hours. They said the girl hit a staff member with a stick before running away, a sheriff’s news release said.
As deputies were searching the area around 7:30 p.m., a passerby flagged them down and reported hearing glass breaking at a nearby house.
Deputies saw the pair inside the home and contacted its owner, who said no one was supposed to be at the home, while advising authorities that there was a shotgun, an AK-47 and 200 rounds of ammunition inside.
Deputies surrounded the house and began talking to the pair. The girl threatened to kill a sheriff’s sergeant and fired at him multiple times about 8:30 p.m., the sheriff said.
Authorities said the children fired at the deputies four separate times over the next 35 minutes. At one point, Chitwood said, an officer went close enough to the home to toss a cellphone inside to try to talk to them.
“They were traversing the length of that house and opening fire on deputies from different angles,” Chitwood said. “They were out on the pool deck, they shot from the bedroom window, they shot from the garage door.”
The girl eventually came out of the garage with the shotgun and pointed it at deputies. They repeatedly asked her to drop the weapon, Chitwood said. She walked back into the garage.
“She comes back a second time and that’s when deputies open fire and she takes multiple rounds,” Chitwood said.
As the deputies provided medical aid to the girl, the boy, who was armed with the AK-47, surrendered, the release said.
“Deputies did everything they could tonight to de-escalate, and they almost lost their lives to a 12-year-old and a 14-year-old,” the sheriff said. “If it wasn’t for their training and their supervision … somebody would have ended up dead.”
Chitwood said the preliminary information shows the deputies took “multiple, multiple rounds – until they were left with no other choice but to return fire.”
The sheriff’s office released the names of the juveniles, but The Associated Press is not using the names because of their age.
At a news conference Wednesday morning in New Smyrna Beach, in the same county as the shooting, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis said he had been briefed on what happened.
“I think one of the kids said, ‘Oh, I didn’t want to kill the police officer. I just wanted to shoot at him.’ That’s despicable,” DeSantis said.
Chitwood said the girl had been in trouble various times over the past year. She was accused of stealing puppies and was put in a halfway home in Flagler County. He said she burned the house down on April 10 and was sent back to Volusia County.
“What the hell is the Department of Juvenile Justice doing? Sending these kids to places that can’t handle them,” Chitwood said.