Zane James Hammond, a former commercial truck driver from Tucson, has been handed a 29-year prison sentence for two counts of Attempted Murder, Maricopa County Attorney Rachel Mitchell announced yesterday. Hammond’s violent actions were deemed premeditated following a work-related spat that led to him quitting his job and embarking on an armed confrontation at his ex-employer’s Phoenix office. The Maricopa County Attorney’s Office has confirmed the details of the incident and subsequent sentencing.
Representing a clear case of premeditated violence, Hammond entered the building with a shotgun on a mission to kill. The president of the company managed to escape physical harm by flipping his desk for cover as Hammond fired at him. The vice president then managed to tackle and disarm Hammond, holding him until the authorities arrived. According to a statement obtained by the Maricopa County Attorney’s Office, “He drove to Phoenix with a shotgun and a mission to kill. That’s not rage, that’s premeditation,” Mitchell said.
The courageous intervention of the company’s vice president was instrumental in preventing any loss of life. His actions were highlighted during the sentencing as heroic, likely saving both his own life and that of the company president. Hammond’s guilty plea was entered for the two counts of Attempted Murder, both categorized as Class Two Dangerous Felonies…