FBI News:
ALBUQUERQUE — A federal jury returned guilty verdicts against Zebadiah Romero, 37, on all charges for the October 2023 premeditated murder of a Taos Pueblo man with a single gunshot to the back of his head. The verdict came after a weeklong trial and less than a day of deliberation.
According to evidence presented at trial, on Oct. 30, 2023, Romero, a non-Indian, shot and killed John Doe, an enrolled member of the Taos Pueblo, inside John Doe’s residence on the Taos Pueblo.
Romero had been evicted and banned from the Taos Pueblo before the murder. John Doe was discovered Nov. 4, 2023, after Taos Pueblo Department of Public Safety officers conducted a welfare check and observed a blood trail leading from John Doe’s bedroom out the front door of the home. Officers later located John Doe’s body inside an adjacent abandoned and locked structure on the property, wrapped in bedding, covered with a tarp, and concealed by other items.
The Office of the Medical Investigator determined that John Doe died from a single gunshot wound to the back of the head.
At trial, the United States presented multiple pieces of evidence implicating Romero, including surveillance footage, witness testimony, and forensic evidence showing that Romero was with John Doe early on the morning of Oct. 30 and was later seen driving John Doe’s truck and in possession of John Doe’s young dog after John Doe disappeared.
Surveillance video placed Romero driving John Doe’s truck in both Taos and Albuquerque within hours of the killing and while disposing of evidence. Evidence also established that Romero returned to the property after the killing, moved John Doe’s body, and concealed it in the adjacent structure.
Jurors further heard recordings of interviews Romero provided to the FBI after he was arrested in February 2024. In those interviews, Romero gave shifting and inconsistent accounts of the events inside the home but ultimately acknowledged shooting John Doe and described removing evidence from the scene, including the spent bullet casing and the firearm. Trial evidence also showed that Romero, a previously convicted felon, unlawfully possessed that firearm and later disposed of it. Romero admitted to stealing and later disposing of Doe’s truck.
The jury found Romero guilty of first-degree murder, using and carrying a firearm during and in relation to a crime of violence, being a felon in possession of a firearm and ammunition, and larceny of the victim’s truck. Romero will remain in custody pending sentencing. He faces mandatory life in prison.
Acting U.S. Attorney Ryan Ellison and Justin A. Garris, Special Agent in Charge of the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s Albuquerque Field Office, announced this case.
The Santa Fe Resident Agency of the FBI Albuquerque Field Office investigated this case with assistance from the Taos Pueblo Department of Public Safety and the Albuquerque Police Department. Assistant U.S. Attorneys Jesse E. Pecoraro and Mark A. Probasco are prosecuting the case.