Las Vegas Couple Gunned Down in Grocery Store Aisle, Prosecutors Say

The footage shows officers clearing the store after Amanda and Victor Frias-Rosas were killed.

LAS VEGAS — Newly released police body camera video shows officers moving through a Smith’s grocery store after a May 12 shooting that killed Amanda and Victor Frias-Rosas and led to 13 charges against Alejandro Alfonso Estrada.

The videos add new detail to the public record as prosecutors weigh a possible death penalty case. Estrada is accused of killing the married couple inside the store near Silverado Ranch Boulevard and Maryland Parkway. Police have described the shooting as targeted and tied it to a custody dispute involving Estrada and Amanda Frias-Rosas.

In the footage, officers can be heard noting shell casings on the floor from the produce area toward aisle 4, where the victims were found. Officers also checked the back office, bathrooms and a bank inside the store. One employee was found hiding in a bathroom and was not injured. Police said that employee told officers she called 911 when the shooting began.

The couple worked at the Smith’s store, though police records said they were shopping there when they were killed. The store later reopened after a closure, and a memorial remained outside the entrance. At a vigil after the shooting, relatives, co-workers and community members gathered to remember the couple. “We were one of those families,” one family member said while describing the shock of seeing a violent news story become personal.

Amanda’s daughter also spoke at the vigil, calling her mother and stepfather “a great couple” and saying they cared for the children. The family’s remarks became part of the wider public response to a shooting that disrupted a neighborhood grocery store and left employees and shoppers shaken.

A Clark County grand jury later indicted Estrada on two murder counts, nine counts of discharging a weapon into an occupied structure, home invasion with a deadly weapon and burglary while in possession of a firearm. Prosecutors said the case would be reviewed for a possible death penalty filing. A judge continued Estrada’s arraignment for 30 days.

Estrada remains in custody and is scheduled to return to court July 30, 2026. The case now moves forward in District Court while prosecutors review the next steps.

Author note: Last updated July 2, 2026.