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Sheriff: Capital murder suspect admitted to crime
The Tyler County Sheriff told KFDM News a man who has ties to a white supremacist group and faces charges of capital murder in the Christmas night shooting death of a Liberty store owner has admitted to the crime and told a deputy he gave up and decided not to shoot when he was surrounded because the arresting officers were white.
Two Tyler County deputies, two state troopers and a Woodville Police officer arrested Stevie "Bubba" Walder, 31, at about 1 a.m. Sunday on Highway 69, just north of Woodville, according to information Tyler County Sheriff David Hennigan provided to KFDM News.
A judge set Walder's bond at $2 million on a charge of capital murder in the death of Naushad Virani, 50.
Two customers found Virani at about 10:30 a.m. Friday behind the counter at Ridgewood Grocery Store in the 4300 block of North Main Street in Liberty. Virani was working on Christmas so his employees could have the night off with their families. Virani had been shot in the head and was found in a pool of blood.
The store's surveillance video helped authorities identify Walder as the suspect.
Liberty police believe robbery was the motive. They're trying to determine if the shooting was a hate crime.
Tyler County Sheriff David Hennigan spoke with KFDM News on Sunday afternoon and described the events leading up to the arrest.
He said one of his deputies received information from a DPS trooper about the murder in Liberty and the suspect.
"My deputy spotted Walder's vehicle and fell in behind him," said Sheriff Hennigan, "and he also saw the trooper who had given him the information about the homicide and the suspect. They confirmed with dispatch that it was the vehicle. My two deputies and two DPS troopers followed the suspect and a Woodville Police officer fell in behind them."
Hennigan said the suspect pulled over on Highway 69, just north of Woodville. The officers conducted a felony stop and pointed their weapons at Walder.
"He told my deputy, 'I saw you behind me. I loaded my clip. When I saw that all of you were white I decided to give up and not fight.' He admitted to my deputy that he shot the store owner."
Hennigan said people with ties to white supremacist groups are a problem in East Texas.
He praised the officers involved in the arrest for working together to take Walder into custody without any harm to themselves or the suspect.









