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Cop-shooting suspect possibly seen near Kanab, Utah
Suspect has stored food in the mountains in so-called “spider holes”

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Jim Driscoll, Chief Deputy for Coconino County Arizona, holds
a photo of Suspect Scott Curley, at a press conference.
  Cop-shooting suspect possibly seen near Kana, Utah
Suspect has stored food in the mountains in so-called “spider holes”

by Nate Carlisle and Mark Havnes

The Salt Lake Tribune

August 27, 2010

Fredonia, Ariz. • The hunt for the man accused of murdering a Utah sheriff's deputy resumed at dawn Friday as an army of 100 police officers cordoned an area of the rugged, high desert just south of the Utah-Arizona border.

Kane County, Utah, Sheriff's Deputy Brian Harris was shot and killed about 2:30 p.m. Thursday while pursing a burglary suspect three miles east of Fredonia. The suspect, Scott Curley, is believed to be hiding in the mountainous area east of Fredonia and Kanab, Utah.

Helicopters, police dogs and federal officers reportedly were assisting Utah and Arizona deputies in scouring the remote area for Curley. A Kanab resident reported sighting an armed man matching the suspect's description Friday morning east of Kanab, about a mile and a half from where Curley was last seen.

Police are “pretty confident they'll find him,” said Coconino County, Ariz., Sheriff's Chief Deputy Jim Driscoll.

The sighting was outside a perimeter set up by law enforcement to contain Curley, so additional officers were sent to investigate the Kanab-area sighting.

“Rather than just pack up and move everyone away from our perimeter, we dispatched a number of units up there to determine if it was him,” Driscoll said.
 
Speaking at a 1 a.m. Friday news conference in Fredonia, Driscoll said Curley's friends have told police that the suspect had stored food in those mountains in so-called “spider holes.” Driscoll said Curley still has the high-powered rifle he used to shoot Harris but investigators don't know if he has any other weapons.

Driscoll said a “variety of tactics” are being considered to find Curley, and police tried to prevent Curley from sleeping during the night. He declined to elaborate.

He said officials intend to send in eight or nine police dogs to find and subdue Curley, rather than put more people in the line of fire.

“They would take care of the suspect,” he said.

Dozens of police officers from Arizona and Utah were at a staging area in Fredonia as of midnight. Driscoll said some sheriffs and police departments even sent officers without being asked. He said 121 officers from 21 agencies were on the scene.

Curley, 23, was being sought in connection with burglaries in Kanab and may also be a suspect in a burglary of a school in Fredonia, during which the bandit pointed a rifle at a custodian.

A search of Utah and Arizona court records shows a history of misdemeanor crimes for Curley, such as intoxication and fighting. But Kane County Sheriff's Sgt. Alan Alldredge said police in Fredonia and Kanab knew Curley well.

“He just seems to be one of those individuals we've been dealing with over and over,” Alldredge said. “Just petty crime type things.”

Driscoll said Harris and another officer pursued Curley into Arizona. A foot pursuit lasted three or four miles. The two were following tracks when Curley fired at and killed Harris, Driscoll said.

Driscoll confirmed Curley has fired at other officers but no one else has been injured.