Rideshare driver charged with m*rder after shooting female passenger in the head while r@ping her (video)
Police have said that Francisco Valadez, an Uber driver recently arrested in the death of an Indianapolis woman admitted he r@ped, sh0t and k!lled her after picking her up from work Sunday morning, September 8.
Francisco Valadez, 29, was arrested Tuesday morning, September 10, by Indianapolis homicide detectives and preliminarily charged with m*rder.
The Uber driver reportedly admitted to police that he shot and k!lled 30-year-old Chanti Dixon in a fit of rage after picking her up and attempting to r@pe her in the back of his car.
Valadez also allegedly admitted to dumping Dixon’s body in an alleyway in a wooded area near the victim’s home after trying to r@pe her corpse again.
“This is just disgusting all around and it did not have to happen,” said Indianapolis Metro police chief Chris Bailey.
According to court documents filed Tuesday in Marion County Court, officers were called around 1 p.m. Monday, September 9, to the 1800 block of Wagner Lane after a woman’s body was found in a nearby wooded area.
IMPD arrived to find a woman naked, unresponsive and lying on her stomach. The victim’s family said they tracked her phone to the woods behind her home where they found her body and called the police.
The woman, later identified by the Marion County Coroner’s Office as Dixon was pronounced de@d on the scene.
After the crime scene was processed for evidence, it was discovered that Dixon had suffered a gunshot wound to the left side of her head.
A woman near the scene told police that the de@d woman was her daughter who had been missing since early Sunday morning. The woman told officers her daughter had gotten off work around 3:30 a.m. and ordered an Uber to get home. No one had talked to her since.
IMPD crews reportedly found two cell phones in the wooded area near Dixon’s body, both of which belonged to Dixon. Her mother gave police the passcodes for both phones, which investigators said would eventually lead them to Valadez.
Once back at the homicide office, detectives found that Dixon had ordered an Uber at 3:34 a.m. from the 2300 block of W. 16th Street. She reportedly made one stop along Washington Street in the Uber before being taken in the same car to her home address on Earhart Street.
According to data stored in the Uber app, Dixon’s driver drove a BMW with an Indiana license plate, which detectives later connected to Valadez.
Detectives then went to Valadez’s home and began questioning him about Dixon. He told police that he did pick up Dixon on Sunday but then began to tell a story of how an armed Black man came up to his car and tried to rob Dixon.
“[Valadez] added that the suspect shot [Dixon] in the thigh and that she kicked herself out of his car and he fled the scene,” police wrote.
“He also said that he had cleaned the blood out of his car.”
Police also reportedly spoke with Valadez’s mother, who told them that her son owned a gun that he regularly carried. She added that he had recently cleaned out his car.
After seizing items inside his car for evidence, police took Valadez in for interrogation.
Admission and arrest Detectives took Valadez to the IMPD homicide office where he was reportedly read his Miranda Rights and signed a waiver agreeing to speak with police.
After telling several stories about what happened to Dixon, Valadez reportedly admitted what actually happened.
“Mr Valadez told two different stories as to what happened with Ms Dixon,” police wrote in the court documents.
Detectives said Valadez admitted to r@ping the woman in the back of his car.
While r@ping the woman, Valadez said she insulted his body. This reportedly caused him to become enraged and shoot Dixon in the head.
Valadez told police that after the shooting, he dragged Dixon out of his car and placed her lifeless body behind a concrete barrier at the dead end of Wagner Lane.
The Uber driver also admitted to trying to have s*x with Dixon’s de@d body, police said.
Valadez was then taken into custody by IMPD and later booked into the Marion County Jail on a felony m*rder charge. IMPD officials said Tuesday that more charges can be expected in the case.
An initial court hearing has not yet been scheduled.
Indianapolis police officials held a news conference Tuesday afternoon discussing Dixon’s murder and the arrest of Valadez.
“This is disgusting, it’s disturbing,” IMPD Chief Chris Bailey said during the conference.
“No one deserves to be treated this way in our community and I am so sorry to her family that we’re here today.”
Bailey then touched on the effect this has on the victim’s family.
“This is a family that’s been ripped apart,” he said.
“This woman is gone from the world unnecessarily by an evil act, and I’m glad that we were able to find this individual as quickly as we did so that he didn’t have an opportunity to perpetuate violence further in our community.”
IMPD’s social media accounts posted a photo of a gun seized in relation to the case.
Bailey indicated that more charges were forthcoming in the case and stressed that the Marion County Prosecutor’s Office would make the final charging decision.
“Women, girls, mothers … they have a right to exist freely in our community without fear of something heinous happening to them,” said IMPD Assistant Chief Catherine Cummings. “They have a right to walk, bike, order a rideshare without fearing something bad will happen to them.”
While they insist the murder is an isolated incident, IMPD said ride-share users can always share their location with friends and family and that women should trust their instincts if things feel dangerous.
“Rideshares continue to be an excellent and safe option to use when you’re out in our community,” said Cummings. “This is a family’s worst nightmare. We’re disgusted by these allegations.”