AG investigates Stanfordville police shooting fatality

STANFORDVILLE — When two shots cut through a quiet morning in Stanfordville, the police were already there. Neighbors would learn later that a police-involved shooting had taken place.

About 11 a.m. on Tuesday, Sept. 25, New York State Police (NYSP) Trooper Katherine Gorey answered a call for help at the Coyote Flaco restaurant, located at 6032 Route 82. An attached liquor store shares the building and a post office sits nearby.

“State Police Poughkeepsie Communications and Dutchess County 911 received a call that an intoxicated individual, armed with a knife, was threatening a woman at the Coyote Flaco Restaurant in Stanfordville,” according to the NYSP press room.

When Gorey arrived on the scene, Jaime Lopez, 41, was threatening a woman with a knife, who was sitting inside a vehicle, according to police. The woman was later reported by news outlets to have been Lopez’s wife, Araceli Parra.     

Gorey encountered Lopez at the scene first. Soon after, a second trooper, Kevin Wolensky, arrived. According to police, Lopez refused to follow verbal commands. When he made what was police described as an aggressive movement toward the troopers, Wolensky shot him, twice.

Although the troopers administered first aid at the scene until Emergency Medical Services (EMS) arrived, Lopez succumbed to his wounds and was later pronounced dead at Mid-Hudson Regional Hospital in Poughkeepsie. He was buried on Sunday.

The female inside the vehicle was uninjured.

On Wednesday afternoon  the post office was open, but several troopers, a K-9 dog and two police vehicles were still at the site. A scheduled press conference for 2 p.m. was canceled. Shortly after, the officers, dog and cars left and the yellow crime scene tape was removed. 

The call that went out on Tuesday was a call for help on Lopez’s behalf, according to a family member at the scene who didn’t want to be identified. She said the family believed that Lopez was struggling with sobriety.

Inquiries were made to NYSP Troop K Public Information Officer Aaron Hicks.

“I have been asked not to release anything further pending word from the attorney general’s office,” he said, adding he couldn’t say how long the investigation would take and noted that releasing information could affect the investigation.

Governor Andrew Cuomo, in 2015, signed into effect Executive Order No. 147, appointing the attorney general (AG) special prosecutor in situations that are related to the deaths of unarmed citizens by a law enforcement officer. The AG can also assume these cases when it is questioned whether or not the civilian was armed and dangerous at the time of death. 

The shooting is being investigated by the state’s Attorney General’s Special Investigations and Prosecution Unit. A second inquiry is being conducted by New York State Police Troop K and its internal affairs division. 

According to Hicks, Gorey became a trooper in 2013, and Wolensky shortly afterward, in 2014.

The Coyote Flaco restaurant, owned by Lopez, a resident of Stanfordville, is one of several Coyote Flaco businesses that were started by the Lopez family in Port Chester, N.Y., nearly 25 years ago. A Coyote Flaco on Route 82 in Verbank closed within the past year. 

The Lopez family, originally from Ecuador, said it was devastated that a call made to police  by a family member, looking for help, ended in tragedy. 

Lopez was described as a hard-working and loving father. He was listed as the president of the company, NancyCo Enterprises, which owns the Coyote Flaco building. Coyote Flaco is a Tex-Mex restaurant that has been in Stanfordville since April 21, 2014. It’s a popular place for lunch, dinner and drinks. 

Araceli Parra is listed as the general manager. According to Lopez’s father, Luis Lopez, Parra will be “taking over the business,” which will reopen on Tuesday, Oct. 9.

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