Teen charged as adult in Utah deputies' shootings
PROVO - A teenage girl charged with aggravated murder was as culpable
as her boyfriend, who was shot and killed by authorities, in a cross-county crime spree that left one deputy dead and another wounded, a prosecutor said
Wednesday.
Meagan Grunwald, 17, was charged as an adult after
a careful review of dashboard camera videos from patrol cars and other evidence
from the Jan. 30 pursuit, Utah County Attorney Tim Taylor said during a news
conference in Spanish Fork.
Grunwald wasn't the shooter but was the driver during the pursuit and also helped pull off a carjacking, he said.
"She was not just along for the ride,"
Taylor said. "She was an active participant in the crime."
Taylor corrected previous reports by saying that
Grunwald was not pregnant with the child of Jose Angel Garcia-Juaregui, 27, who
was killed by authorities. Charging documents filed Tuesday showed that
detectives were told she was pregnant and the couple planned to marry and move
to Mexico when she turned 18.
A pregnancy test done at the jail came back
negative, Taylor said, adding that he couldn't account for the misinformation
given by people interviewed.
Garcia-Juaregui killed Utah County sheriff's Sgt.
Cory Wride and wounded Deputy Greg Sherwood, authorities said. Sherwood was
released from the hospital Tuesday but faces a long recovery.
Taylor said the motive for the crime spree remains
unclear but might have been related to an arrest warrant issued a day earlier
for Garcia-Juaregui that alleged violations of his parole conditions. He had
served 4 1/2 years for attempted homicide and was paroled from a Utah prison in
December 2012.
Grunwald met Garcia-Juaregui in July 2013 and
began spending most of her time with him, pulling away from old friends, court
records show. The two were living together for several months at her mother's
house.
Grunwald is being held on $1 million cash-only bail and
could face 25 years to life in prison if convicted. Taylor said she will not
face the death penalty because she is under 18.
The counts against her include obstructing
justice, aggravated robbery and use of a controlled substance. Urine tests
revealed Grunwald had methamphetamine in her system, court documents show.
All the charges come under state statutes that
make aiding and abetting a crime nearly as serious as committing it, Taylor
said.
Her age was taken under consideration, but she needs to be held
accountable, Taylor said.
"We know that she's 17 and that she's
young," Taylor said, "But we believe she is as culpable, under Utah
law, as he is."