Police went to Chad Moretz's
home to ask him about a friend who had gone missing and quickly found
themselves in a tense standoff when a relative answered the door and
whispered: "He's got a rifle. He's going to kill y'all."
It was at least the fourth time in 18 months deputies had gone to see Moretz.
Neighbors and relatives had accused him of chasing his wife with a
machete, threatening to kill a man with a handgun and stabbing a dog
with a pocket knife. But none of that prepared investigators for what
they found Jan. 11 after Moretz walked onto his front porch with an
assault rifle and was killed by a SWAT team sniper.
Inside the home, amid filth and roaches and foul odors, police found
the missing man's severed head and two hands hidden behind a kitchen
cabinet inside a hole in the wall. The rest of the body, dismembered by a
power saw and wrapped in bags, was discovered in a storage locker a
half-hour away in neighboring South Carolina."I don't believe there was a motive," said David Ehsanipoor, an investigator for the Effingham County Sheriff's Office. "It wasn't a drug deal gone bad or a love triangle. Chad was just crazy."
Medical examiners confirmed the body belonged to Charlie Ray, 35. Ray had been a friend of Moretz, and his family had been searching for him since New Year's Eve.
An autopsy showed Ray was stabbed more than 40 times and had been
dead more than a week before his remains were found. Moretz's wife told
investigators her husband and Ray had been drinking and talking, then
started arguing. She said Moretz grabbed a knife and started repeatedly
stabbing Ray in their kitchen, Ehsanipoor said. Investigators suspect
Ray's body was dismembered to make it easier to hide.
Ray's mother, Sandi Ray, said in a brief phone interview her son struggled with Tourette's syndrome.
Megan Edgerly, a friend of Ray's since childhood, said the
debilitating brain disorder left him unable to drive or to hold down a
job. She said he handled his tics — flailing arms and vocal outbursts —
with grace and humor and treasured friends who accepted him in spite of
it."Charlie never had a frown on his face," Edgerly said. "He was dealt a bad hand, but he always maintained a real positive attitude throughout all of it."
Moretz lived about 20 miles from where Ray lived with his parents. Moretz had moved there from southwest Florida, where violence devastated his own family a year and a half ago.
His father is scheduled to stand trial in April for the slaying of Moretz's mother in Naples, Fla. Police said Jeffrey Moretz, 55, followed his estranged wife, Christine Moretz,
to a hospital and fatally shot her while she was visiting a friend on
July 5, 2011. He then shot himself, but survived. Court records show
Jeffrey Moretz filed for divorce in Collier County, Fla., two weeks
before his wife's slaying.
One of Chad Moretz's neighbors, Ross Maruca, said Moretz didn't work
and let his grass grow knee-high before Maruca decided to cut it
himself. He said Moretz once showed up at his door and asked his wife
for food and money. She gave him $20, he said, and Moretz later paid it
back."You could look at him and tell something was wrong, just the look he had," Maruca said. "He looked like he was dazed all the time."
Deputies jailed Moretz on July 23, 2011 — not quite three weeks after his mother was killed — when his brother-in-law told police he'd received a frantic phone call from his sister saying Moretz was chasing her with a machete. Moretz's wife denied the story. Deputies charged Chad Moretz with trespassing when they found him hiding by a shed in a neighbor's yard.
Last May, neighbors called the sheriff's office when they said Moretz stabbed a dog that had gotten loose after he was bitten several times. In November, a friend told police Moretz asked for a ride, and when he refused, he pointed the gun at him and threatened to kill him and his family.
Deputies arrested Moretz on
charges of making terroristic threats on Dec. 22. Jail records show he
was released on $3,500 bond the same day.
Almost two weeks later, Maruca
called police after seeing a TV news report that Charlie Ray was
missing. Maruca knew Ray because he had lived at Moretz's house for two
or three months the previous summer. The neighbor said he saw Ray at the
house Jan. 2.
Police initially talked to
Moretz's wife, who said Ray wasn't there. Days later, they decided to
return to the suburban neighborhood of modest brick homes talk to Moretz
himself. His brother-in-law, Kevin Lambert, met detectives at the door
and whispered a warning.
"He said, 'Chad's in here, he's got a rifle, he's going to kill y'all,'" Ehsanipoor said.
Detectives dragged Lambert out of
the house and retreated. Moretz, armed with an assault rifle, refused
to come out or to let his wife leave. A hostage negotiator and a SWAT
team were brought in.
After more than four hours,
Moretz's wife ran outside through the front door and collapsed in the
yard. Then Moretz emerged with an AR-15 rifle. Ehsanipoor said he was
raising the gun when a sniper shot him.
Though investigators say they
believe Moretz alone killed Ray, his wife and brother-in-law have been
charged with helping conceal the death. Kimberly Moretz
did not immediately return a message left at a phone number listed for
her on a police report. Lambert did not have a listed phone number.
Investigators said it was one of
the siblings who told authorities during the standoff that Ray's remains
were hidden in a storage locker in nearby Jasper, S.C.
"Everybody's still in a state of shock," said Edgerly, Ray's longtime friend. "This isn't supposed to happen."
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