Son of victim shot by Azusa gunman: 'She was at the wrong place at the wrong time'

Friday, November 11, 2016
Family of grandmother shot by Azusa gunman speaks publicly
Elidia Dominguez, 65, was critically injured when police said 45-year-old Carlos Mendez when on a shooting rampage in Azusa on Election Day.

BOYLE HEIGHTS, LOS ANGELES (KABC) -- The family of a grandmother who was shot by a gunman who police said went on a shooting rampage while "binging on cocaine" in Azusa on Election Day spoke publicly for the first time.

Elidia Dominguez, 65, remains in critical condition at LAC+USC Medical Center in Boyle Heights after police said 45-year-old Carlos Mendez shot her.

Dominguez's sons, Carlos and Art, have been by her hospital bedside since Tuesday.

"She's strong and she's a fighter and we're all praying that she pulls through," Carlos Dominguez said.

Elidia Dominguez had just cast her ballot in Azusa and was walking home when she was struck by a bullet.

Detectives said Mendez was high on cocaine when he stepped outside his home and began shooting at cars.

MORE: Gunman in Azusa rampage was 'binging on cocaine,' officials say

He critically injured a woman driving, then walked up to his neighbor, 77-year-old Bill Varney, and gunned down the beloved long-time resident.

Officers arriving at the scene shot and killed Mendez. Two nearby polling places were placed on lockdown during the incident.

Carlos Dominguez said he couldn't reach his mother and thought she was still under the lockdown. He later found out she was one of the two people critically wounded.

"What he did was wrong. Innocent people getting hurt, it just wasn't right. I don't care what a person's going through, you don't do it like that. You don't take out your anger like that," Carlos Dominguez said.

Carlos Dominguez said his mother wasn't able to talk yet, but had opened her eyes and knew her family was by her side.

He believed she'd fight to recover in order to be with her seven grandchildren and her husband of 45 years.

"You don't want to believe it. You see it and hear it and you don't want to believe it's one of your family members," Carlos Dominguez said. "This is just one of those things where she was at the wrong place at the wrong time."