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			 Judge Warren Granville reduced the bail for Leslie Allen Merritt 
			Jr., 21, to nothing from $150,000 after Merritt's attorneys told an 
			emergency hearing in Maricopa County Superior Court that an expert 
			prosecution witness now said the reported ballistics match "does not 
			exist." 
 "There's no evidence against him that he's responsible for this," 
			defense attorney Jason Lamm told the court. "He is no more the I-10 
			freeway shooter than, respectfully, you are your honor."
 
 Granville ordered that Merritt wear an electronic monitoring device 
			and report back to court on May 18.
 
 A spokesman for the Maricopa County attorney's office declined 
			comment, citing a gag order in the case.
 
			
			   Merritt, a landscaper from the Phoenix area, had been held for about 
			seven months on 15 criminal counts including drive-by-shooting and 
			aggravated assault, for the first of four shootings along a 10-mile 
			(16-km) stretch of Interstate 10 that passes through Phoenix.
 Merritt told a judge at his initial court appearance last September 
			that authorities had "the wrong guy," and he has maintained his 
			innocence in the case.
 
 "I told you guys when I first got arrested I didn't do it," Merritt 
			told reporters moments after his release from county jail around 6 
			p.m. local time. "Right now I just want to go home and be with my 
			kids."
 
 Merritt's bail originally had been set at $1 million but later was 
			lowered to $150,000.
 Merritt was the lone suspect tied to a spree 
			of 11 shootings along the busy thoroughfare that left drivers 
			fearful and unsettled throughout the area.
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			Only one person suffered a minor injury during the shootings before 
			Governor Doug Ducey announced Merritt's Sept. 18 arrest with an 
			emphatic "We got him!" message on Twitter.
 Police said they were able to "forensically link" four of the 
			shootings to Merritt's handgun, which was found later by 
			investigators at a local pawn store.
 
 A state police spokesman had said that bullets from the handgun 
			discovered at the store were then matched to fragments found at some 
			of the shooting scenes.
 
 State police initially branded the case an act of "domestic 
			terrorism," but no such charges were brought by prosecutors. 
			Authorities have not made public what they believe the motive was 
			for the shootings.
 
 (Reporting by David Schwartz in Phoenix; Editing by Dan Whitcomb, 
			Curtis Skinner, Peter Cooney and Leslie Adler)
 
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