GLEN BURNIE, Md. —
Anne Arundel County police are still searching for a teenage husband and wife wanted in connection with a double homicide in Anne Arundel county.
Police say 19-year-old Edwin Javier Hurtado-Valdez and his wife, 18-year-old Cambrea May Lynn Sieck are suspects in the murders of 20-year-old Antwon Elijah Queen from Brooklyn, Md., and 24-year-old Antwan Troy Briggs.
Just before 5 p.m. on Sunday, police said they responded to an apartment complex in the 300 block of Highland Drive in Glen Burnie for the report of a shooting. When officers arrived on scene, they found Queen in the parking lot suffering from gunshot wounds. Queen was pronounced dead on the scene, according to a police report.
Officials said Briggs was found inside a room in the complex. He was also pronounced dead on the scene.
Authorities said the bodies were transported to the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner who ruled the deaths as homicides.
Witnesses identified Hurtado-Valdez as the suspect and gave police a description of his vehicle. Police were able to locate his car on Monday in the 8000 block of Sexton Road in Pasadena, Md. Officers executed a search warrant on Hurtado-Valdez’s car and found evidence linked to the homicides inside and outside of his car.
Anne Arundel County State’s Attorney’s Office and Anne Arundel County Police obtained arrest warrants for Hurtado-Valdez charging him with two counts of First and Second Degree Murder, two counts of First and Second Degree Assault, and Firearm Use in a Felony Violent Crime.
Authorities charged his wife, Sieck, with two counts of Accessory After the Fact, after learning she helped her husband hide evidence and escape.
Police believe the two are together and should be considered armed and dangerous. Anyone who comes in contact with them should call 911 immediately.
Detectives are also asking anyone with information on the double homicides to call 410-222-4731. If anyone with information wishes to remain anonymous, they can also contact the Anne Arundel County Police Tip Line 410-222-4700 or Metro Crime Stoppers.