Authorities are seeking a suspect now identified in a New Mexico state police officer’s killing

ALBUEQUERQUE, N.M. — New Mexico State Police said Saturday they have identified the suspect in the shooting of one of their officers as a 33-year-old South Carolina man who was driving a car belonging to a woman killed in his home state.

State Police Chief Troy Weisler said at a news conference that authorities are looking for Jaremy Smith of Marion, South Carolina, in the fatal shooting of Officer Justin Hare, 35. Smith was considered armed and dangerous.

Authorities said Hare was dispatched around 5 a.m. Friday to assist a motorist in a white BMW with a flat tire on Interstate 40 west of Tucumcari.

Hare parked behind the BMW and the suspect got out, approached the patrol car on the passenger side and then shot the officer without warning. They said the suspect then walked to the driver’s side of the police vehicle, shot Hare again and pushed him into the backseat before leaving in the patrol vehicle.

State police were alerted to the shooting by a “duress signal” coming from Hare’s radio, Weisler said. The arriving officer found the abandoned patrol car, and later the injured officer, further down a road near the highway. Hare was taken to a hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

Weisler said his department later learned that the white BMW had been reported missing in South Carolina and that it belonged to a woman killed there, paramedic Phonesia Machado-Fore. New Mexico State Police are in contact with South Carolina authorities, he said, but there was no word on whether Smith had been charged in the earlier killing.

The Marion County Sheriff’s Office in South Carolina reported on its Facebook page Saturday that Machado-Fore’s body was found Friday around 6:15 p.m. outside Lake View in Dillon County. Her family reported her missing on Thursday evening.

The Dillon County Coroner’s Office has scheduled an autopsy for Monday.

New Mexico State Police have issued an arrest warrant for Smith on charges of first-degree murder, armed robbery, shooting at or from a motor vehicle, tampering with evidence, being a felon in possession of a firearm, unlawfully taking a motor vehicle and criminal damage to property.

Weisler said Smith had ties to New Mexico, had spent time there in the past, and had a lengthy criminal history.

Hare had been with the state police since 2018. He was born and raised in New Mexico and is survived by his parents, girlfriend and their two young children.