Crime & Safety

Aiden Leos Mourned By Community: Reward Reaches $300,000

A memorial sits on the bridge over the 55 Freeway where the 6-year-old died The community wants answers following the road-rage shooting.

ORANGE COUNTY, CA — The Orange County Board of Supervisors have matched and exceeded the $50,000 reward for information leading the arrest and conviction of a suspect who shot and killed 6-year-old Aiden Leos on the 55 Freeway in Orange. The board instead offered an additional $250,000 toward finding Aiden's killer.

Information leading to the capture and conviction of a suspect will amount to a now $300,000 reward, Wagner's office confirmed Wednesday.

Aiden was riding in the booster seat of his mother's Chevrolet Cruze when an unidentified person inside a white Volkswagen fired upon the car. Instead of arriving at Kindergarten at the Calvary Chapel School in Yorba Linda, Aiden died on the 55 Freeway as his mother called for help.

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The family has offered a $50,000 reward through their GoFundMe page which has raised more than $220,000 as of Tuesday.

Now, the county board will add $100,000 to that total, with a portion of the additional funds will come from the discretionary budget of Wagner's office.

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The emergency supplemental agenda item needed a four-fifths vote for passage from the five-member board because it was made after the board's agenda was posted. Wagner stepped in with the offer ash the fatal freeway shooting occurred in his district.

Meanwhile, California Highway Patrol officers have poured additional resources into the investigation, CHP Officer Florentino Olivera said.

"We're asking the public if the know anything, if anybody's been talking about this, please step up and say something," Olivera said.

The agency also established the santaanachptipline@chp.ca.gov email address to receive any tips about the shooting. Anonymous tips can also be phoned in to 800-TELL-CHP, Olivera said.

"Someone is always available to answer that call," Olivera said.

Investigators were "working non-stop" combing through Caltrans camera footage and other evidence to see if there was any video that would offer a clue, Olivera said.

Also, anyone who was in the opposite lane of traffic when the shooting occurred was asked to check dash-cam video that might be helpful to investigators, Olivera said.

"We're also asking for help from people going southbound that day because that was bumper-to-bumper traffic," Olivera said. "If they have dash- cam video that would be helpful."

He added, "We lost a 6-year-old boy to this senseless violence, so if you know something step up and say something."

The boy's mother was driving a silver sedan with her son in the right rear passenger booster seat when another driver opened fire between 7:55 a.m. and 8:15 a.m. Friday on the northbound Costa Mesa Freeway between the Garden Grove (22) Freeway and Chapman Avenue, California Highway Patrol Officer John De Matteo said.

It's unknown how many rounds were fired, and the only initial description of the suspect vehicle is a white sedan, DeMatteo said. Investigators later said the vehicle may be a newer model, possibly white Volkswagen "wagon-style" sedan.

The mother pulled over immediately and called 911 and the boy was rushed to Children's Hospital of Orange County, where he was pronounced dead, DeMatteo said.

The mother, Joanna Cloonan, told reporters, "They took my son's life away. He was beautiful and kind ... and you killed him for no reason."

She said she was cut off "abruptly" on the freeway before the shot rang out.

"I pulled over and took him out of the car and tried to put my hand on his wound while calling 911," Cloonan said. "He was losing a lot of blood."

She appealed to anyone with information to come forward, saying she wanted "justice to be served for my son."

Investigators did not provide details of the road rage incident but assured the public it was not related to the rash of suspected pellet-gun shootings of vehicles on Southland freeways.

Relatives said Aiden's death has devastated the family.

"My mom, there was a road-rage on the freeway, and someone pulled out a gun and shot my little brother in the stomach," the boy's 15-year-old sister, Alexis Cloonan, told reporters. She said there were two people in the suspect vehicle -- a female driver and a male passenger.

"He was only 6, and he was so sweet," Alexis said through tears. "He was a very, very loving boy. So please, help us find who did this to him."

The boy's uncle, John Cloonan, said the family wanted to speak out so the shooter "can see what you've done to this family."

Aiden's mother "was merging to the right side to get away from this person," he said. "And as you can see, if you go online and look at the photos, there's one bullet shot in the trunk that went through the trunk and right through my nephew. So you tell it was a cowardly way of doing it, because they shot her in the back."

According to relatives, the boy's mother was driving Aiden to kindergarten when the shooting occurred.

Reyes Valdivia told the Los Angeles Times that he and his wife had just dropped their children off at school when they spotted a woman on the freeway shoulder pulling a child out from the passenger side of the car. He said the woman "was hysterical" and told him she was fired on while driving her son to school in the carpool lane.

When the mother tried to switch lanes to exit, a white sedan with a man and woman inside cut her off and she gestured to them and proceeded into the exit lane, Valdivia said. That is when the bullet entered the left side of trunk and "went through the boy's back."

"She heard her child scream and immediately stopped," he said.

The CHP closed the northbound side of the freeway for several hours to search for clues.

Olivera said investigators are hoping to hear from witnesses, especially those whose vehicles are equipped with a dash-cam camera.

"Even if you think it wasn't anything big, call us," Olivera said. "We'd like to hear from you."

Anyone with information that may be helpful to investigators is asked to call CHP Officer Kevin Futrell at 714-567-6000.

City News Service, Patch Editor Ashley Ludwig contributed to this report.

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