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Passaic Ex-Con Gets 15 Years For Shooting Paramus Officer In Garfield

GARFIELD, N.J. -- An ex-con from Passaic must spend 13 years in prison before he's eligible for parole for shooting an undercover police officer during an armed robbery attempt outside a Marshall's store in Garfield two years ago, under a sentence imposed by a judge in Hackensack on Wednesday.

Rafael Vasquez

Rafael Vasquez

Photo Credit: Mary K. Miraglia

Rafael Vasquez, 27, already had had a lengthy record before he shot the officer -- who was on loan to the Bergen County Prosecutor’s Narcotic Task Force -- in the right hip and lower left leg on April 22, 2014.

The officer was released a few days later from Hackensack University Medical Center.

Vasquez — also known as “King Lucifer” — was hit in the arm and leg by shots fired by backup officers outside the Marshals store off Passaic Street. He was treated at St. Joseph’s Regional Medical Center in Paterson before being jailed on $2 million bail.

Last month, Vasquez pleaded guilty in state Superior Court in Hackensack to attempted murder and weapons possession by a convicted felon.

His plea deal includes the 15-year stretch for attempted murder running concurrently with a 10-year sentence for having the gun, Acting Attorney General Robert Lougy said.

“When individuals like Vasquez commit violence against a police officer, we owe it to all police officers to prosecute such criminals to the full extent of the law,” Lougy said. “We have met that obligation with this sentence.”

“Vasquez is a very dangerous criminal,” said Elie Honig, the director of the state Division of Criminal Justice. “With this sentence, we have ensured that for a minimum of 13 years, he will be behind bars where he cannot again threaten the lives of police officers or members of the public.”

Also sentenced Wednesday were co-defendants Melvin Guzman, 21, of Garfield, and Patrick Morel, 23, of Clifton, who got eight years each -- seven before they'll be eligible for parole. Each took guilty please in December.

Deputy Attorney General Anthony P. Torntore prosecuted the case, which was investigated by the Attorney General’s Shooting Response Team, comprised of members of the State Police Major Crime Unit and the Division of Criminal Justice.

The attempted robbery and shooting occurred during a $400 marijuana buy-and-bust by the prosecutor's Narcotic Task Force in the Walmart parking lot.

The trio had their own plans: They brought a bag of oregano.

The officer was in the driver’s seat of a county undercover vehicle with Morel when Vasquez walked up to the car window, pointed a .380-caliber handgun at him and said, “Give me everything you have,” authorities said at the time.

A struggle ensued, and Vasquez fired into the car twice as backups converged on the car.

Morel fled in his car and was later caught on the Garden State Parkway.

An investigation by CLIFFVIEW PILOT found that Vasquez plea-bargained his way out of a pair of attempted murder charges to lesser counts in Passaic County.

As a result, he spent only three months behind bars before being released in November 2013, despite a history of violent crime, records show.

A Passaic County grand jury indicted him on attempted murder charges in January 2011. That charge was merged with a second attempted murder count a week later — which boosted his bail to $1 million from $350,000, records show.

The 5-foot-5-inch, 140-pound Vasquez — also known as Rafael Vasquez-Pina and Gustavo Canga — pleaded guilty to aggravated assault in exchange for a three-year term. But records show he was soon back on the street, having received credit for time spent behind bars.

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