ANDERSON — The man accused of killing Elwood police Officer Noah Shahnavaz is back in jail after he appeared in a Madison County court for an initial hearing Friday morning.
Carl Roy Webb Boards II, 42, is facing the death penalty in connection with the death of Shahnavaz. He is charged with murder, possession of a firearm as a serious violent felon and two counts of resisting law enforcement, according to court records.
He was in court for an initial hearing and a judge set his next court date, a pretrial conference, for Sept. 30.
The hearing was scheduled last week after Madison County Prosecutor Rodney Cummings said the state would seek the death penalty.
He is still being held in the Hamilton County Jail, which is the county he was arrested in.
Shahnavaz, 24, was shot and killed on July 31 during a traffic stop near State Road 37 and County Road 1100 North in Madison County.
According to a probable cause affidavit, the man accused of killing him fired more than 35 rounds at Shahnavaz.
Shahnavaz is a 2016 graduate of Fishers High School and served in the U.S. Army for five years. He joined the Elwood Police Department in August 2021.
RELATED | Elwood police officer shot, killed; suspect in custody | Suspect in Elwood police officer's death has several prior criminal convictions, records show | Suspect in Elwood cop's shooting fired 36 rounds; officer never unholstered gun, court doc says | Everything we know about fallen Officer Noah Shahnavaz
-
IMPD Violence Reduction Teams seize more than 800 guns off Indy streets
This year, nearly 1,200 people have been arrested. More than 625 pounds of narcotics and nearly 4,900 pills have been seized.IMPD begins traffic enforcement on Meridian Street after resident concerns
IMPD officers are now patrolling Meridian Street after residents raised concerns about the speeding issues they see there all the time.Final phase of West St. resurfacing brings new lane closures to downtown Indy
Lane closures set to begin September 17 as crews complete resurfacing on West St. from Morris to 11th.Documentary explores overlooked creative legacy of Indianapolis
WRTV hosted filmmaker Chris M. Wilborn to learn more about his upcoming project that follows three Indianapolis artists: Gary Gee, Israel Solomon, and Johnson Simon.