Pct. 4 deputy constables search for suspect in Humble road rage shooting that left victim critically injured

Tuesday, April 27, 2021
Deputies search for suspect in Humble road rage shooting
FULL PRESS CONFERENCE: Officials released surveillance video, hoping someone can help identify who Constable Mark Herman calls a "very violent individual."

HUMBLE, Texas (KTRK) -- The Harris County Precinct 4 Constable's Office needs the public's help in identifying the suspect in a road rage incident after a man was shot while driving in Humble Monday.

Deputy constables responded to a case of road rage around 3:52 p.m. Monday in the 8700 block of Stagewood Drive.

According to Constable Mark Herman, the victim was backing out of a parking spot at the 7 Days Food Store on Kenswick Drive when his truck got close to the suspect's car.

Although Herman said the victim did not hit the suspect's car, surveillance video captured the suspect getting out and engaging in a verbal altercation with the victim.

Herman noted that it appears the suspect took something out of his car when the altercation began.

"We surmise it may have been a gun. We don't know," Herman said. "Investigation will continue."

After the victim pulled out of the parking lot in his truck, the suspect followed him several blocks away, pulled up alongside his vehicle, exchanged some words and fired two shots, Herman said.

The victim was struck in his lower extremities. He was taken to the hospital with critical injuries and is expected to undergo surgery Tuesday, Herman said.

Now, the constable's office is releasing the surveillance video, hoping someone can identify the suspect Herman describes as a "very violent individual."

SURVEILLANCE VIDEO: Do you recognize the suspect seen exiting his vehicle moments before a road rage shooting?

"All we need to know is his name, and we'll do the rest," Herman said. "It is very, very important that we get this guy off the street."

Herman said the constable's office has teams ready to find the suspect and make an arrest as soon as he is identified.

Herman noted that details in the surveillance video indicate the suspect lives nearby.

"He's in house shoes. He lives close, obviously," Herman said. "We have scoured there, looking for the vehicle."

The black car that the suspect was driving had paper plates that could not be made out on surveillance video, Herman said.

Herman had a warning and some advice when it comes to road rage shootings in the Houston area.

"Road rage will be picking up in the summer. It always does. It's hot outside. People get heated quicker," Herman said. "We encourage people to not engage in verbal altercations. To not give signs or hand language, even waves to people, because they might construe it as something else. Try not to make eye contact with folks when you're driving. They take that as an aggressive manner."

The Stagewood Drive shooting was not the only Houston-area road rage shooting reported Monday.

A driver who was in his truck with his wife and their friend was shot in the leg while trying to get away from a gunman in north Houston, according to investigators.

Houston Police Department said officers responded to a report of a shooting in the 12300 block of North Freeway near Greens Road at about 10:45 a.m. Monday.

READ MORE: Eye contact at stoplight leads to man being shot on North Fwy, HPD says

Police say the victim's wife was looking at the suspect's vehicle at the light just before the frightening ordeal unfolded.

HPD Sgt. Hector Pizana said the shooting stemmed from a confrontation at a red light at West Greens and Greens Parkway. A woman in the truck glanced over at another vehicle that was stopped at the light and was revving its engine.

"She made eye contact with the other driver and that's all it took," Pizana said.

Pizana said the victims were trying to get away when they were fired upon by both the driver and the passenger. One had a shotgun and the other had a handgun. The passenger was wearing a ski mask.

HPD reported a steep increase in road rage shootings last year. Through October, there was a 30% increase compared to the same time in 2019. Six shootings were deadly.

"We're riding around with stuff already on our plate, so it doesn't take much to set us off or to trigger us," explained Sgt. Richard Standifer with the Texas Department of Public Safety.

Standifer advises drivers to drive to a public place if they are being followed and to de-escalate any contentious situation by just letting it go.

"Some of them are going to cut you off. Some of them are going to jam on the brakes and let you know how slow you're going, and at that point, you're going to have to be the bigger person," Standifer said. "If you don't, there's a high probability we'll end up with a situation that includes gunfire."

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