Colorado prison chief's death probe extends to Texas police chase
Colorado authorities are working to determine whether a high-speed chase Thursday involving a man who shot repeatedly at law enforcement officers in Texas is related to this week's shooting death of Tom Clements, Colorado's prison chief.
The chase and crash 
occurred in north Texas, about 700 miles from where Clements was killed 
Tuesday night. It began around 11 a.m. CT (noon ET) in Montague County, 
where the driver of a black Cadillac shot at a law enforcement officer 
who had pulled him over in a traffic stop, said Wise County, Texas, 
Sheriff David Walker.
Two bullets struck the 
Montague County deputy, who was wearing a bulletproof vest, in the chest
 and another grazed his head before he managed to call in help, said the
 sheriff. He is in serious condition at a Dallas-Fort Worth area 
hospital.
This incident was 
followed by a high-speed chase that ended around 30 miles away in 
Decatur, Texas. That's where city police tried to pull him over, and the
 Cadillac's driver fled and started shooting at officers. The suspect 
shot one patrol vehicle and that of Decatur police Chief Rex Hoskins, 
whose car was parked in the median.
"I would say he was running about 100 mph, and he had his left arm out the window and he was just shooting," Hoskins said.
Soon after that, the man 
turned his Cadillac onto another road and slammed into an 18-wheel 
truck, according to Walker. Even with the front of his car crushed, the 
suspect -- who has not been publicly identified -- got out and resumed 
shooting.
He did not shoot any responding officers in the Wise County exchange, but was shot himself.
After being kept alive on machines for some time, the suspect died Thursday evening, according to Walker.
The Cadillac had two 
different Colorado license plates -- one on the front and the other on 
the back -- said Hoskins. A law enforcement official said Thursday that 
authorities are "are taking a strong look" at whether Thursday's 
incident and Clements' shooting are linked.
"Colorado is sending ...
 investigators that are working on that case and other homicide cases in
 the Colorado area," Walker said.
Saudi national's case considered in probe
The Texas incident comes
 the same day that Colorado investigators said they were looking closely
 at one criminal of the thousands that Clements' oversaw in the state's 
prison system -- a Saudi national named Homaidan al-Turki.
El Paso County, Colorado, Undersheriff Paula Presley
 on Thursday acknowledged the media speculation over al-Turki, who was 
convicted of sexually assaulting his housemaid at his Aurora, Colorado, 
home seven years ago. Earlier this month, Clements denied al-Turki's 
request to serve the remainder of his Colorado prison sentence in Saudi 
Arabia, records show.
Investigators, she said,
 are still trying to determine whether "there may have been some 
motivation or legitimate threat" related to al-Turki's case, adding that
 "we have not identified that specifically as a threat."
Al-Turki, now at the 
Limon Correctional Facility, was sentenced to 20 years to life in prison
 after being convicted on a dozen counts of sexual contact, theft, 
extortion and false imprisonment in 2006, a state document shows. 
Prosecutors said he enslaved his Indonesian maid for several years.
Photos of a firey crash scene in Texas after a high speed chase 
that may be related to the shooting death of Tom Clements, Colorado's 
prison chief.
At the request of the 
U.S. ambassador to Saudi Arabia, Colorado Attorney General John Suthers 
traveled to Riyadh in 2006 to meet with King Abdullah, other Saudi 
officials and the al-Turki family to discuss the case.
Clements explained in a 
March 11 letter to al-Turki that he was turning down his transfer 
request because al-Turki had refused to go through sex offender 
treatment, as required by law.
"To date you have reportedly declined due to religious reasons/conflicts with your Islamic faith," Clements wrote.
The letter also notes that on February 25, 2011, al-Turki's sentence was reduced to six years to life.
 received no response to its requests for comment from al-Turki's lawyers.
In light of the renewed 
attention on his case, al-Turki was removed this week from the rest of 
his prison's population, according to the state's department of 
corrections.
Late prisons chief described as 'amazing man'
Clements had been chief 
of Colorado's prison system for a little over two years. He took the job
 in January 2011 after working for 31 years as part of Missouri's 
Department of Corrections.
In his time in Colorado, he'd made a big impression.
"He was an amazing man, 
an amazing man," Alison Morgan, spokeswoman for Colorado's Department of
 Corrections, said Thursday. "An inspirational leader."
He was killed around 8:45 p.m. MT (10:45 p.m. ET) Tuesday, as he answered the door of his Monument, Colorado, home.
Since then, investigators had said they knew very little about who might have pulled the trigger.
Some witnesses, though, 
said they saw a man driving a vehicle -- possibly a Lincoln Continental 
or a two-door Cadillac -- away from the neighborhood a short time after 
the shooting. Others reported seeing a black, boxy vehicle with its 
engine running but no one inside on Clements' street.
Asked Thursday whether 
the prison chief's killing may have been a professional hit, Presley 
from the El Paso County, Colorado, Sheriff's Office said, "We don't have
 any specific information that would lead us to that."
The central Colorado 
county sheriff office's major crimes unit has received more than 100 
solid tips about the incident, including a growing number of witnesses 
describing a black car then in the area.
Meanwhile, the mourning 
continues for Clements. His funeral will be held Sunday, Gov. John 
Hickenlooper's office said, and he'll be remembered at a public memorial
 service in Colorado Springs the next day.