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Nehemiah Griego, 15, is seen in an undated photo provided by the Bernalillo County Sheriff's Deptartment. Griego is charged with killing five family members on Jan. 19, 2013, including his father, mother, and three youngest siblings in Albuquerque, N.M. Authorities in New Mexico say Griego had reloaded his guns after the attacks and planned to go to a Wal-Mart and randomly shoot people. Instead, they say he texted a picture of his dead mother to his 12-year-old girlfriend, then spent much of Saturday with her. The two went to the church where his father had been a pastor, and Griego eventually confessed to killing his parents and three younger siblings. (AP Photo/Bernalillo County Sheriff's Deptartment)
Associated Press

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) - More than 2,000 people gathered at an Albuquerque church to remember five members of a New Mexico family gunned down in their home last weekend. There were also prayers for the 15-year-old son and brother charged with the killings.

Following a police escort, chaplains and members of the Albuquerque Fire Department lined the procession. Bagpipes played at the memorial service Friday and the urns of former pastor Greg Griego, his wife Sarah and their three young children were carried into the one of the city's largest churches.

Family members recalled Greg Griego's lumbering walk, his hearty laugh and his endless commitment to helping others to turn their lives around. His wife, known for her cooking, and their children were just as much a part of that ministry. The family was always a front-row fixture at church services.

The crowd prayed for the Griegos and for their son Nehemiah, who remains in custody.

Annette Griego, one of Greg Griego's adult daughters, told those at the service that her father was a man whose heart was after God.

"My dad never gave up on me. He never gave up on any of us. He never stopped giving us Jesus and so I know he would want us to do the exact same thing for our brother, Nehemiah," she said. "So if you wonder where we stand, we stand alongside our brother."

"We stand confident that God will take this tragedy and use it for something good," she said.

News of the slayings has reverberated throughout the community, where Greg Griego- a former gang member turned pastor- was known for his work with jail inmates, his service at local rescue missions and his spiritual guidance for firefighters and members of the military.

Friends said Greg Griego and his teenage son went on missions to Mexico and that the boy was a talented drummer who played with the church's youth band.

On Friday, family, friends and members of the Calvary Albuquerque church who watched the boy grow up continued to struggle, trying to make sense of the tragedy.

Nehemiah Griego was just a normal teen to Vince Harrison, a former police officer who had known the family for about 10 years through his security work at the church.

"He did not fit the criteria of a kid who was crazy into guns and wanted to hurt people. That's absolutely false," Harrison said.

Nehemiah Griego is facing murder and child abuse charges in the deaths of his parents and three younger siblings- all found shot to death inside their rural home south of Albuquerque on Jan. 19.

Detectives were at the home for two days collecting evidence. They also have been reviewing text messages and calls between the boy and his 12-year-old girlfriend and security video from Calvary, where the teen apparently spent much of the day following the early morning shootings.

After the killings, authorities allege that Nehemiah Griego reloaded his parents' two semi-automatic rifles and put them in the family van and planned to gun down Wal-Mart shoppers.

Public defender Jeff Buckels said he will consult with mental health experts and investigate the effects of violent video games. Authorities have said Griego liked to play "Modern Warfare" and "Grand Theft Auto."

___

Follow Susan Montoya Bryan on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/susanmbryanNM


(Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

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  • Abuse
    Michoacan wrote...
    Interesting to note that the Jim Crow lawbreaking
    Dr. King and other civil rights activists needed guns to protect themselves from NRA members who thought that the uppity blacks needed to be put back in their place. More guns in both sets of hands hardly made for the safe, polite society that gun nuts claim arise from universal gun ownership.
  • Abuse
    Zapotec wrote...
    "Robert F. Williams, a former Marine who
    volunteered to lead the Monroe chapter of the NAACP and founded a 60-member, NRA-chartered rifle club, described in his 1962 book, 'Negroes With Guns,' how the Monroe group owed its survival in the face of vicious violence to the fact that they were armed. In several cases, police officials who normally ignored or encouraged Klan violence took steps to prevent whites from attacking armed blacks. In other cases, fanatical racists suddenly turned into cowards when they realized their intended victims were armed."
  • Abuse
    Michoacan wrote...
    I too can see the profitability in arming
    contending camps in a race war, Zap, rather than taking a position against the hate and racism that fuels the conflict. Lots of money to be made in fueling paranoia and division rather than talking reason, as we see happening today.
  • Abuse
    Steve wrote...
    The immediate call to infringe
    on the rights of Americans by members of Congress created quite a stir with all gun owners, republican and democrat alike. The first AWB was widely unpopular and did little if anything to stop gun violence. Many who supported it lost their jobs representing the people. Clinton is now cautioning Dems again.
  • Abuse
    Michoacan wrote...
    A real common story. Formerly law abiding
    gun owners or family members who use their Second Amendment rights to gun down other family members. Statistics from the much dreaded gun violence tell us that this is, by far, the most prevalent use of guns intended for defense of the home.
  • Abuse
    wrote...
    Blame the recent media hype
    I blame the recent over the top, media hype since the Conn Shooting. The constant barrage on TV and radio surely led this young man to decide what he can do, since others have done it and it is an attention getter. Waek minds are easily influenced by media hype (propaganda). Just look at our last election. When will we again have ADULTS leading this nation.
  • Abuse
    BURP wrote...
    Excellent discussion
    from both sides of the aisles. I appreciate the history and wisdom from the past.In the meantime I think I'll go home and clean my weapons tonight.
  • Abuse
    Steve wrote...
    @ All to common dialogue from the Anti Gun Kooks
    Take away everyones guns so crazy people can't use them. Now there's a problem solver. The Kooks are quick to react and slow to digest reality.
  • Abuse
    SurpriseMe wrote...
    trigger locks
    if guns were stored securely this would not have happen. a trigger lock cost is about $10 and can be key or combination. Obama needs to provide trigger locks for gun allowing us to control our own weapons but he wont because he would rather tell us how to live our lives.
  • Abuse
    OneWonders wrote...
    It is interesting that the
    anti-Constitutionalists and anti-2nd Amendment people out there skip right over the fact that this kid had anger issues and don't think this might be a problem with all of these gun shootings, they skip over the fact that there were irresponsible parents in this case who didn't have their guns locked up and that left wing media is actually starting to cover these stories now so they can demonize the NRA and people who believe in our Constitution but don't cover the murders that occur daily in Chicago where they have some of the strictest gun laws in the country.
    Equal Justice, Not Social Justice.