911 calls reveal both sides of deadly road rage incident

Author: ASSOCIATED PRESS
Published:
MGN

BEVERLY HILLS, Fla. (AP) – In 911 calls from an apparent road rage incident, a north Florida man tells a dispatcher he has his gun “cocked and loaded” because “some maniac” was trying to run him off the road.

A woman in the other car also called 911 Thursday night as her husband, Candelario Gonzalez, 44, followed Robert Eric Doyle, 51, through the streets of Beverly Hills.

According to 911 tapes released by the Citrus County Sheriff’s Office, both men and their wives were on the phone with dispatchers while they were driving.

Gonzalez’s wife could be heard trying to get her husband to go home. She later told police Doyle was the aggressive driver and that her husband followed him to get his address so he could file a complaint.

Doyle told the operator: “They’re following me to my house. I’ll be there in 20 seconds; the guns are already out.”

As the two vehicles stopped in front of Doyle’s house, his wife could be heard begging him not to shoot.

“Don’t shoot. I’ve got 911 on the phone,” she yelled. But five shots were fired, leaving Gonzalez dead at the scene.

An arrest affidavit says Doyle held Gonzalez’s family at gunpoint until deputies arrived.

Sheriff’s Capt. David DeCarlo said Doyle told him he feared for his wife’s safety. But DeCarlo said the 911 call doesn’t really support that notion.

“Between the evidence that was found on scene, couple that with the 911 calls, we felt comfortable that Mr. Doyle was the primary aggressor,” he said.

Doyle has a concealed weapons permit, which allows him to carry a loaded gun in his vehicle.

Doyle is charged with second-degree murder and aggravated assault with a deadly weapon. He remains in jail. It’s not known whether he’s hired a lawyer.

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