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ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — Leandra Davidson told officers she was in shock—waiting two hours to call 911—after a friend shot her boyfriend Marlin Lovato during a fight.

Davidson told officers Lovato was still alive, but by the time officer got into the apartment, the 21-year-old lay dead on the floor.

Since determining the shooting was likely self-defense, police have released few details on the events leading to Lovato’s death at the Sun Village Apartments on June 5.

What police have released is that officers detained three people, including the shooter, collected a firearm and sealed two vehicles as evidence.

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The file now sits on the desk of Prosecutor Joshua Jimenez, waiting for review by the District Attorney’s Office to determine if it was justifiable or if any charges will be filed.

Lovato had a history of domestic violence against Davidson and was arrested last April for a charge of aggravated battery against a household member with great bodily harm.

According to lapel footage and 911 calls obtained by the Journal, Davidson and two friends fled the apartment after Lovato was shot, smoked pot and sat in the parking lot for two hours before calling police.

The incident began with a 911 call around 3 p.m. from a Sun Village employee who saw Davidson get thrown out of a moving car, allegedly by Lovato.

The employee let Davidson into the office and locked the doors, but Davidson refused paramedics and went to the apartment she shared with Lovato to move her things out.

Then, around 8 p.m., Davidson called police herself — this time to report a shooting.

“I was just trying to leave my boyfriend and it just went out of control,” Davidson told the dispatcher. “I’d really just like the cops to come out here so I can file a report.”

When officers arrived, they found a distraught Davidson with two friends — a man and woman — in the parking lot.

In the lapel footage, Davidson told police her friends were helping her move out when Lovato showed up, closing the door and holding all three them at gunpoint. That’s when Davidson’s friend, identified only as Dominic, grabbed another gun off the bed and shot Lovato.

Davidson told officers Lovato was still alive when the three fled, she said by that time two hours had passed.

“What took so long for you guys to call?” the officer asked.

Davidson replied, “Because we were in shock, we didn’t know what to do.”

The officer asked who shot Lovato, and Dominic pointed to his chest before breaking into sobs.

As the officer searched the car for the gun, he smelled marijuana and asked who was smoking.

“All of us were,” Davidson’s friend replied.

Another lapel video shows an officer knocking on the door to the apartment, his gun drawn.

“Albuquerque police, come to the door with your hands up and everything,” the officer announced. “Marlin, we want to make sure you’re okay.”

But there was no answer.

The officer opened the door to find Lovato’s body. He felt for a pulse before announcing him “10-7″—the police code for dead.

Davidson declined to comment on this story.

Lovato’s stepdad Ernest Coriz still doesn’t know what led to his stepson’s death.

He said Lovato moved with Davidson to Albuquerque a year ago but the two would visit him often on the Santo Domingo Pueblo.

“We just assumed they were happy together,” he said. “We wanted what was best for Marlin.”

Coriz said he learned of Lovato’s death when Davidson and her mother showed up to his home in tears.

He said the women told him Lovato had been killed but didn’t elaborate and left in less than a minute, before he could gather his thoughts or ask any questions.

“Bam — they were gone,” Coriz said. “I couldn’t believe it.”

He said he hadn’t heard from them since and hasn’t heard from police at all.

To his knowledge, police never contacted family to let them know Lovato was dead.

The next news Coriz heard was when a Sun Village apartment manager called to tell him to pick up his stepson’s things — Lovato’s father wasn’t in the picture and his mother had died of an illness six years ago.

“He had nobody,” Coriz said. “I loved this boy — this boy was my boy.”

Lovato’s shooting is the fifth shooting this year ruled self-defense by Albuquerque police. Bernalillo County Sheriff’s Office also ruled a Tijeras shooting last week as self-defense. Of the six shootings, only two have been turned over to the District Attorney’s Office for review.