Commonwealth v. Bryan Cage; Life Plus 1,248 Years for Shooting VBPD Detective, Possession of Child Porn

Commonwealth v. Bryan Cage; Life Plus 1,248 Years for Shooting VBPD Detective, Possession of Child Porn
0Comments

City of Virginia Beach issued the following announcement on Aug. 16

Colin D. Stolle, Commonwealth’s Attorney for the City of Virginia Beach, announced today that Bryan Carl Cage, 50 years old, formerly of the 1600 block of Ohio Avenue in Virginia Beach, Virginia, was formally sentenced for charges of Attempted Capital Murder of a Law Enforcement Officer, Aggravated Malicious Wounding, Use of a Firearm (2 counts), Discharging a Firearm in an Occupied Dwelling-Maliciously (39 counts), Possession of Child Pornography, Possession of Child Pornography – Subsequent Offense (99 counts), and Possession of Marijuana.  On May 4, 2021, a jury found Cage guilty of these charges and recommended a sentenced of Life plus 1,248 years and 30 days.  Circuit Court Judge James C. Lewis, who presided over the seven-day trial, imposed that sentence today. 

The Commonwealth’s evidence proved that for several months leading up to June 13, 2017, an investigation into child pornography possession led police to Bryan Carl Cage and his parents’ residences on Ohio Avenue in Virginia Beach to serve a search warrant.  Over 15,000 images and videos of child pornography collected over ten (10) years on twelve (12) different devices were traced to Cage’s above-garage apartment.  When police attempted to serve the search warrant at 6:30 a.m. on June 13, 2017, they wore clearly marked police attire, and yelled, “Police! Search warrant!”  The property consisted of a house and a detached garage with an upstairs living space.  Members of the police department, divided into two teams, attempted to make entry to the living spaces.

Cage’s parents lived in the main house and exited the home without issue.  Cage, however, refused to open the door to the detached garage.  Unbeknownst the police officers, he had several firearms as well as five and a half (5 ½) pounds of marijuana growing in the kitchen of the detached garage.   After several commands for Cage to open the downstairs door, police breached it.  They then pushed in the top door, and Cage shot the detective as he took one step into the apartment.  The officer sustained two gunshot wounds to his shoulder that ultimately forced him to medically retire from the police department. 

Multiple police officers returned fire, attempted to retreat, and rendered aid to the wounded officer.  After a five (5) hour stand-off, Cage finally surrendered and was taken into custody.  The officer Cage shot has permanent damage to his shoulder and cannot engage in normal physical activities such as holding his infant on his right side. 

Bullet fragments taken from the officer’s vest were forensically analyzed and determined to be fired from a rifle. The jury rejected the defense’s theory that the detective was shot by another officer, as the other officers in the stairwell at the time Cage was firing his rifle were carrying 9mm pistols.

Chief Deputy Commonwealth’s Attorney Scott M. Lang and Assistant Commonwealth’s Attorney Kari A. Kolar prosecuted the case. Please contact Macie Allen if additional information is desired.

Original source can be found here.



Related

Amy M. Pearson, District 3 at New Kent County

Bay Aging and New Kent County launch Bay Transit Microtransit Service

Bay Aging has launched an affordable microtransit service in partnership with New Kent County officials aimed at improving local transportation options for residents—including seniors—with limited access otherwise available through ride-hailing apps like Uber or Lyft. The program comes amid rising student enrollments within county schools.

Ronald P. Stiers, Chair of the New Kent County Board of Supervisors

Board of Equalization appeal deadline for assessments set for April 30

New Kent County residents have until April 30 to appeal their property tax assessments through the Board of Equalization. Recent data highlights rising student enrollment across local schools and demographic trends within New Kent County Public Schools.

Ashley Ward, Principal at King William High School

King William High School to hold second annual mattress fundraiser on April 25

King William High School will hold its second annual Mattress Fundraiser on April 25 to benefit its football team. The event highlights growing student enrollment trends across King William County schools and ongoing community support initiatives.

Trending

The Weekly Newsletter

Sign-up for the Weekly Newsletter from EC Virginia News.