California cop killer Justin Flores received slap on wrist after weapons arrest

The suspect who gunned down two cops at a motel outside Los Angeles Tuesday was on probation for illegally carrying a gun and had been banned from packing heat since 2011.

Justin Flores, 35, allegedly slayed El Monte Police Cpl. Michael Paredes and Officer Joseph Santana and was killed in the firefight when the officers responded to a report of a stabbing.

Flores had served two prison terms for burglary and car theft and pleaded no contest to possessing a firearm as a felon last winter, according to The Los Angeles Times.

The weapons charge could have sent the career criminal back to prison for three years, but instead he was sentenced to two years’ probation and 20 days of time served, the paper said.

A day before the shooting, Flores’ probation officer filed for a revocation hearing after the suspect allegedly assaulted his girlfriend last week, violating his probation, according to the report.

Instead of being arrested and jailed, Flores was allowed to stay on the streets ahead of a June 27 hearing.

The Los Angeles County Probation Department was “currently investigating” why Flores was not taken in for the violation, the outlet said.

Corporal Michael Paredes was shot and killed in Los Angeles County.
El Monte Police Department/Faceb
Officer Joseph Santana, one of the El Monte police officers killed in the shooting.
Officer Joseph Santana, one of the El Monte police officers killed in the shooting.
El Monte Police Department/Faceb
Justin Flores
Flores served two prison terms for burglary and car theft and pleaded no contest to possessing a firearm as a felon last year.
AP/California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation

Paredes and Santana reportedly came under fire after knocking on the door of a room at the Siesta Inn Tuesday afternoon.

A shootout with Flores started in the room and ended in the parking lot with all three men dead, officials told the paper.

“We don’t have all the facts yet,” El Monte Mayor Jessica Ancona reportedly said Tuesday night, adding the officers were “essentially ambushed.”

The officers were native to the San Gabriel Valley city of 110,000 and were remembered by Ancona as hometown heroes.

A woman touches a picture of officer Joseph Santana
Police Cpl. Michael Paredes and Officer Joseph Santana were remembered as hometown heroes.
AP/Keith Birmingham

“They grew up here; to us, they’re El Monte homegrown,” Ancona said. “They’re our boys.”

“They were good men,” Capt. Ben Lowry, the El Monte Police Department’s acting chief, told the paper. “These two heroes paid the ultimate sacrifice today. They were murdered by a coward.”

Santana, 31, was survived by his wife, daughter and twin boys.

Paredes, 42, a 22-year veteran, left behind his wife, daughter and son.

A police station memorial adorned with candles, flowers, US flags and “thank you” signs was flooded by community residents.

Only two members of the department had ever died in the line of duty before Tuesday, the Times reported.

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