Pubdate: Tue, 27 Oct 1998 Source: Houston Chronicle (TX) Contact: http://www.chron.com/ Copyright: 1998 Houston Chronicle Author: S.K. BARDWELL SUSPECT KILLED BY OFFICERS IN FREEWAY CAR CHASE ID'D A man killed by Houston police officers after a car chase down the Southwest Freeway on Sunday has been identified as 24-year-old Derek Jason Kaeseman. Kaeseman was shot at by seven officers, who said he had disregarded orders to keep his hands in sight, reached under the seat of his truck, then began climbing out the passenger-side window with something shiny in his hand. The object was later determined to be a can opener, investigators said. The chase began when two officers saw what they believed was a drug transaction between a man in a truck and another man standing outside it about 5:15 p.m. Sunday in the 2200 block of Bagby. The second man then got in the truck, and they took off. The passenger, 27-year-old John Edick, leaped from the moving truck at Bagby and Tuam and was taken into custody by one of the officers. Edick, who told police that Kaeseman threatened to kill him if he didn't get out of the truck, was released without charges Monday. During the chase, officers said Kaeseman threw things from his truck, and rammed a patrol car near Bellaire Boulevard. The chase, which was joined by other patrol officers, ended in Stafford, where Kaeseman got off the freeway at Corporate, then tried to drive across the grass and re-enter the freeway, but crashed into a guardrail. The shooting is being investigated by HPD's homicide and internal affairs divisions, and by the Fort Bend County District Attorney's Office. In July 1996, Kaeseman was fined for misdemeanor criminal mischief. He also received a 180-day jail term for a misdemeanor charge of fleeing a police officer. Those involved in the shooting are Sgt. Antonio R. Guzman, 40, and Officers Ruston K. Alsbrooks, 38; M.J. Manuel, 26; Tony N. Nguyen, 29; Leopoldo Rubio-Ronso, 27; Tony Tomeo, 34; and S.W. Wilkins, 34. Except for Guzman, who is a 20-year HPD veteran, the officers have been with the department fewer than five years. They all have been reassigned, said HPD spokesman Fred King. - --- Checked-by: Don Beck