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Home / Neighborhood / Orange County / Aiden Leos case: Bail denied for alleged gunman in road-rage shooting

Aiden Leos case: Bail denied for alleged gunman in road-rage shooting

Marcus Anthony Eriz
by City News Service
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The man accused of firing a shot during a road-rage confrontation on the Costa Mesa (55) Freeway that killed a 6-year-old boy who was in the back seat of his mother’s car was ordered Friday to remain jailed without bail.

Orange County Superior Court Judge Larry Yellin said the alleged actions by Marcus Anthony Eriz, 24, both during the shooting that killed Aiden Leos and afterward — with prosecutors alleging he wielded a gun at another motorist just days later — were “alarming.” He deemed Eriz a danger to the community and ordered that he be held without bail.

Eriz was previously being held on $2 million bail.

Wynne Lee, 23, who is charged as an accomplice in the shooting that killed Aiden, remains jailed on $500,000 bail, with Yellin requesting that she undergo a background review and return to court next Friday for another bail hearing.

The allegation that Eriz “brandished” a weapon at another motorist after the shooting “`is very alarming,” Yellin said.

“I would think any self-reflection of the crime … or a gun revulsion or thoughtfulness of going down that route again” would have occurred to the defendant following the shooting of the boy, Yellin said. “Mr. Eriz does seem to be a complete danger to society. There’s a substantial threat to the community if Mr. Eriz gets out.”

But Yellin ordered the court’s pretrial services officials to do a background check on Lee to set a bail for her.

Lee’s attorney Tom Nocella argued that according to the law, his client’s bail should be $20,000 to $25,000. Her parents are prepared to post the bail and provide a residence for her, Nocella said.

Senior Deputy District Attorney Whitney Bokosky argued that Lee also represented a threat because she knew her boyfriend had a weapon in her car and allowed him to continue keeping it in the vehicle after the boy was killed.

“She’s not as dangerous as (Eriz), but she is dangerous,” Bokosky said.

Orange County District Attorney Todd Spitzer argued that Lee instigated the road rage incident by cutting off the victim and that “her boyfriend was trying to conceal his identity” after the shooting.

Lee was also part of “secreting” her car during the “manhunt” for the boy’s killer, Spitzer said.

During a search of the couple’s Costa Mesa apartment “there was drugs, there were firearms and she was part and parcel of all of that activity,” Spitzer said.

Nocella said his client never tried to change her appearance.

“It was not sophistication,” Nocella said of Lee’s actions following the shooting. “It was more stupidity than anything else.”

Yellin said he was “inclined to set bail and to reduce it somewhat” for Lee.

Eriz and Lee both pleaded not guilty to the charges stemming from the shooting, and a pretrial hearing was set for Aug. 27.

Eriz is charged with murder and a felony count of discharge of a firearm at an inhabited dwelling, with sentencing enhancements for discharge of a firearm causing death. He faces up to 40 years to life in prison if convicted at trial.

Lee is charged with a felony count of being an accessory after the fact and a misdemeanor count of having a concealed firearm in a vehicle. Lee faces up to four years behind bars if convicted at trial of all charges. Three of those years would be prison and one in jail.

Aiden Leos was fatally shot May 21 as his mother, Joanna Cloonan, was driving him to kindergarten in her Chevrolet Sonic on the freeway.

About 8 a.m. that day, the two were cut off by the defendants, who were in a Volkswagen Golf Sportwagen, according to prosecutors.

Lee was behind Cloonan in the diamond lane before swinging over to the fast lane and then accelerating at an “extremely high rate of speed” to get in front of Cloonan, prosecutors contended in a bail motion filed Wednesday and first obtained by City News Service.

“Wynne Lee motioned to the victim vehicle a `peace sign’ with her hand and continued driving,” prosecutors said in the motion for higher bail.

A few miles later as Cloonan was attempting to merge over to the Riverside (91) Freeway east, she passed the defendants and was “still angry about being cutoff and put up her middle finger at the two as she passed,” prosecutors said.

“She then heard a loud bang to the rear of her vehicle and heard her little boy in the backseat say, `Ow,’ ” prosecutors said.

Cloonan immediately pulled over and saw Aiden suffered a chest wound, prosecutors said. Aiden was pronounced dead at 8:39 a.m. at Children’s Hospital Orange County.

In an interview with investigators on June 6, Eriz said he “was angry after being `flipped off’ by Ms. Cloonan, so he grabbed his loaded Glock 17 9mm and racked a round,” according to the motion.

“He then rolled the passenger window down and took a shot at her vehicle. After shooting the victim, the defendants continued on to the 91 eastbound and on to work in the city of Highland.”

They worked a full day and the couple returned home.

During the week of May 24-28, the two got into another “altercation on the freeway,” prosecutors said.

“As Wynne Lee was driving on the 91 eastbound on the way to work with defendant Eriz as her front passenger, a driver in a blue Tesla did something to make defendant Eriz angry, acting aggressively,” prosecutors alleged.

“Defendant Eriz again took out his gun and brandished it to the driver of the Tesla. That driver told the defendants that he had called the police and then he drove away.”

A co-worker of Eriz told him on May 28 that it looked like their car was the suspect vehicle police were seeking, prosecutors said.

Eriz “claims that at that time, he looked on the Internet and saw the story about Aiden Leos’ death,” prosecutors alleged. “He said he `immediately’ knew he was responsible for the boy’s death. He then told Wynne Lee about his revelation.”

Prosecutors allege that after May 28 Eriz hid the Volkswagen at a family member’s garage and did not drive it again, instead driving his red truck to and from work.

Eriz shaved his “substantial beard” on June 3 and “started to wear his long hair back in a tie,” prosecutors said.

The couple also applied for a new job after May 28, prosecutors said.

Prosecutors argue that Eriz is an “extreme danger to the community” who has “shown that he cannot control his temper and he goes to extremes in the snap of a finger when he is angered.”

Eriz has “multiple firearms in his possession,” including an “AR, a revolver and the Glock 17 that was used in this murder,” prosecutors argued.

“He has various photos and videos on his social media that show him shooting different kinds of guns,” prosecutors said. “He is also a skilled shooter as evidenced by those same videos. He admittedly and regularly carried his loaded Glock with him on his person and in Ms. Lee’s vehicle while they drove to work.”

Taking his guns away would not deter the defendant from using another weapon, prosecutors argued. Also, putting him on GPS monitoring would only tell investigators where he was when he “commits his next crime of violence,” prosecutors argued.

Lee is also a danger to the public because she knew Eriz had his loaded gun in her vehicle and never pulled over to check on Cloonan following the shooting, prosecutors argued. She also failed to call 911 “or do anything to follow up about what her passenger had done,” prosecutors said.

She was driving during the next altercation on the freeway as well, prosecutors said.

The two were also considered risks to flee prosecution, prosecutors argued.

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