Suspect accused of burning deputy's body after killing him

Steven Wiggins walks into the Circuit Court to be arraigned in the killing of Dickson County Sgt. Daniel Baker at the Dickson County Courthouse in Charlotte, Tenn., Friday, June 8, 2018. (Lacy Atkins/The Tennessean via AP)
Steven Wiggins walks into the Circuit Court to be arraigned in the killing of Dickson County Sgt. Daniel Baker at the Dickson County Courthouse in Charlotte, Tenn., Friday, June 8, 2018. (Lacy Atkins/The Tennessean via AP)
photo This photo provided by the Dickson County Sheriff's Office shows Sgt. Daniel Baker. A manhunt continued Thursday, May 31, 2018 in the slaying of a Baker, a Tennessee sheriff's deputy who was fatally shot during a traffic stop. (Dickson County Sheriff's Office via AP)

CHARLOTTE, Tenn. (AP) - A man charged with killing a deputy in Tennessee and burning his body now faces federal and state charges that could be punishable by death, authorities announced Friday.

A state judge on Friday arraigned Steven Joshua Wiggins on 12 charges, including premeditated murder, in the shooting of 32-year-old Dickson County sheriff's Sgt. Daniel Baker. Wiggins' alleged accomplice, 38-year-old Erika Castro-Miles, was arraigned via webcam on the same murder charge.

The judge entered not-guilty pleas and appointed public defenders for both. Wiggins, 31, appeared in court in orange prison scrubs, flip-flops and handcuffs, speaking lowly and showing little emotion. The deputy's friends and family, including his wife, Lisa, sat through the hearing and became emotional at times.

Baker was responding to a call about a suspicious car last week when he discovered it was stolen, authorities have said. Castro-Miles was in the car when Wiggins shot Baker, dragged the deputy's body into the police cruiser and drove it to a rural area, where he set it on fire, court documents state.

Wiggins became the object of a massive 48-hour manhunt. A backpack he said he fled with was found nearby with two guns inside, including Baker's backup weapon, court documents state.

Attorney General Jeff Sessions and U.S. Attorney Donald Cochran announced after the hearing that federal charges against Wiggins include carjacking resulting in Baker's death, shooting a gun while committing a violent crime, having that crime result in death and being a convicted felon with a gun.

"At the Department of Justice, we back the women and men in blue. Violence against law enforcement officers - federal, state, local or tribal - will not be tolerated," Sessions said in a written statement.

Cochran said that if Wiggins is convicted, he faces up to life in prison and is eligible for the federal death penalty, which needs Sessions' approval. A local prosecutor has said he will seek capital punishment on the state charges for both defendants.

According to federal court documents, Wiggins said the suspicious vehicle was parked in the road pointed the wrong way for about four hours, had a flat tire and wasn't drivable when Baker arrived. Wiggins was behind the wheel and Castro-Miles was in the front passenger seat. Wiggins gave Baker a fake Social Security number when asked for ID, court documents show.

Wiggins remained at large after being charged the day before for assaulting Castro-Miles and stealing that car from her, according to a report from the Kingston Springs Police Department. Castro-Miles told police Wiggins had been "doing meth all night and smoking marijuana," the report says.

Wiggins has multiple convictions for assault, violation of probation and other offenses on his record.

Baker determined the car had been stolen and ordered the two out of the car, but Wiggins claimed his door wouldn't open and Baker ordered Wiggins to leave from the passenger side, prosecutors said.

Baker's body camera recorded some of what happened next: While he walked around the rear of the car to the passenger side, Wiggins fired a pistol about five times at Baker, hitting him at least once. Baker tried to take cover, but collapsed, prosecutors said.

Wiggins then fired five more times, the last three at short range, prosecutors said.

After firing those shots, Wiggins went to where Baker was lying and thought he was dead, but "didn't want the man (Baker) to suffer," so he shot Baker in the head multiple times: "like a dog, you know, man, its suffering. You make sure," Wiggins told investigators in court documents.

Wiggins answered a radio dispatch and a call from another deputy on Baker's cellphone, pretending to be Baker, the state indictment says.

Then he dragged the deputy's body into the rear seat of the patrol car and drove it 3 or 4 miles (4.8-6.4 kilometers) to a field, court filings say. He told investigators he was thinking about the TV show CSI and worried about forensic evidence and fingerprints, so he lit paperwork on fire in the front and back seats and fled, court documents show.

The evidence, however, wasn't destroyed. Baker was found with two gunshot wounds to his torso, one to his hand and three to the left side of his head. A preliminary autopsy showed the right side of his uniform was charred and his skin blackened.

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