Vegas police, family defend mom killed in road-rage shootout

Husband says wife panicked when she went in search of driver who frightened her

By Ken Ritter
Associated Press

LAS VEGAS (AP) — What police first described as the road rage-inspired killing of an innocent mother of four has morphed into a more complex scenario, prompting tough questions and a backlash against her family.

Tammy Meyers, 44, was shot in the head outside her home in a Las Vegas cul-de-sac shortly before midnight Thursday after confrontations that began when she was giving her 15-year-old daughter an after-hours driving lesson and the girl honked at a driver she felt was speeding, police said.

Those facts haven’t changed, police Lt. Ray Steiber said this week at a news conference, where he noted that the mother’s life-support was disconnected on Valentine’s Day, and insisted that she alone is “our victim.”

But the fatal shooting turned out to be a two-way shootout, provoked by an encounter with unidentified assailants, after Tammy Meyers had her daughter rouse her older son Brandon, who grabbed his gun and joined her in a hunt for the driver she had encountered earlier, Steiber said.

With questions lingering about the shooting and a murder suspect still at large, Las Vegas police held a news conference Wednesday at a busy intersection near headquarters in which they decried the dangers of road rage but did not discuss the investigation into Meyers’ killing.
The family spoke at a vigil Tuesday night next to the junior high school parking lot where Kristal Meyers got her driving lesson.

“She didn’t deserve this,” said Brandon Meyers, 22. “I did what I had to do to protect my family. Everyone can think what they have to think. I did it for a reason. And I’d do it for anyone I love.”

No one in the family called police until after the shooting, Steiber said, and initially, investigators had just the comments of the son and daughter to go on.

Meyers’ husband, Robert, who was in Southern California at the time, said Friday that his son Brandon told him he believed there were three people in the car, and that he had hit the car at least once with his 9mm handgun.

He called his son a hero, and said his wife panicked when she went back out in search of the driver who frightened her.

“There was mistakes made, like every one of us has made in our lives, but this particular mistake was made to keep a bigger mistake from happening,” Robert Meyers said.

He didn’t immediately respond Wednesday to a message left at his business, Auction Stalkers LLC.

Officer Laura Meltzer, a department spokeswoman, said police were still looking Wednesday for the people in the sedan.

A police sketch shows the suspect to be a man in his mid-20s with blond spiky hair and blue or hazel eyes, wearing a white V-neck T-shirt. “All indications to us are that this unknown person fired first,” Steiber said.

Kristal Meyers told police that her mother was driving them slowly home from the parking lot when a car sped up from behind, and that she reached over and honked their horn as it passed.

“She figured that this person was speeding, and needed to be corrected. Right or wrong, she beeped the horn,” Steiber said.

The man then blocked their car, got out and said “some words” that “frightened Mrs. Meyers and her daughter, at which time Mrs. Meyers sped past him” and went home, Steiber said.

“Here’s what happens when she gets home,” the lieutenant continued. “Mrs. Meyers is scared, but she’s upset. She tells her daughter to go wake up her son, 22, to wake him up and have him come outside and get in the car with her so later they can find who frightened them and her daughter out on the roadway.”

“They left the house in search of that person,” Steiber said, and found a grey or silver four-door sedan matching the description of the car in the earlier confrontation. She followed the “suspect vehicle,” then they broke apart and she drove home. Then the vehicle came into their cul-de-sac.

“There was a volley of rounds fired from that vehicle,” and Brandon Meyers “returned fire,” the officer said. “When the firing was done, he found that his mother had been struck by gunfire. The suspect vehicle then backed out and sped away. That’s what happened. Tammy is a victim.”