Coffee Shop Ambush

Just a brief numbers estimate here. It is reported that the Lakewood force was 120 officers. I figure that there are 4 shifts, dividing the 168 hours in a week. This group of 4 were from the same shift, preparing to work, so that would be over 13% of that shift that were killed. Imagine that happening where you are working right now.

I am truly at a loss for words here. When these fine upholders of the law are gunned down, no matter the method, it is tragic. This was not in the commission of a crime, such as trying to get away during a robbery, which makes it even more appalling to me. Execution for revenge? I hope they capture the shooter at once, and I would not want to be him when the camera glare is gone, and they have him alone...
 
yes - I'm asking you what you're using as total figure. 8-10% of what equals to average number of officers killed per year.

there are about 700,000 law enforcement officers in USA (excluding federal agents) so if it's 8-10% officers killed per year... that would mean average about 56,000 officers (8%) to 70,000 officers (10%) would be killed per year :eek3:

proper rough calculation would be - average about 0.007% officers are killed per year

.


Ooooops. Misunderstanding.

Am not referring to the total number of police. Only to the total number of police who were murdered in a single year.

I used only your figures below. You list 3 years. 2006, 07, and 08. In those 3 years an average of 48 officers were killed a year. Assuming 2009 will fall close to that average then this one man killed from 7% to 9% of all the officers who were killed this year.

For those who is not aware - killing federal agents, cops, or any law enforcement agents is an automatic death penalty. I agree with that penalty. After all.... it's what kept them safe for past several years. the statistic on law enforcement killings are very low.

according to FBI site -
-41 officers were killed in 2008 (from 19 states)
-57 officers were killed in 2007 (from 25 states)
-48 officers were killed in 2006 (from 25 states plus DC & Puerto Rico)

From 1997 to 2006 - 562 officers have been killed in the line of duty

.

Of course there are things I do not know. Such as were these all the officers killed in all states or did some states go unreported? Would the statistics be different if DC & Puerto Rico were reported in 2007 and 2008? Or did they go unreported because no officers were killed there?
 
Just a brief numbers estimate here. It is reported that the Lakewood force was 120 officers. I figure that there are 4 shifts, dividing the 168 hours in a week. This group of 4 were from the same shift, preparing to work, so that would be over 13% of that shift that were killed. Imagine that happening where you are working right now.

.


There would not be a single person in this town, excluding new arrivals, who would not have a friend or relative among the dead.
 
updates from CBS news

Ex-Con Sought in Washington Cop Shooting
Ex-Con Sought in Washington Cop Shooting - CBS News

Investigators identified a man with an extensive criminal past as a "person of interest" in the ambush on four police officers, who were shot to death Sunday morning at a coffee shop.

Pierce County sheriff's spokesman Ed Troyer told reporters that Maurice Clemmons, 37, was one of several people investigators want to talk to and that he could not be called a suspect at this point.

In a news release, the sheriff's office said Clemmons has an extensive violent criminal history from Arkansas, including aggravated robbery and theft. Clemmons also recently was arrested and charged in Pierce County in Washington state for third-degree assault on a police officer, and second-degree rape of a child.

The four officers were with the 100-member police department of Lakewood, which adjoins the unincorporated area of Parkland, where the shootings took place. The city identified the victims as Sgt. Mark Renninger, 39; Ronald Owens, 37; Tina Griswold, 40; and Greg Richards 42.

Troyer said one of those officers fought with the gunman and may have wounded him before the officer died just outside the doorway. He told reporters that investigators were asking area medical providers to report any people wounded by gunshots.

Troyer said investigators believe two of the officers were shot dead while sitting in the shop, and a third was killed after standing up. The fourth apparently struggled with the gunman out the doorway and "gave up a good fight," getting off a few shots before he was either shot there or succumbed to earlier wounds.

"We believe there was a struggle, a commotion, a fight ... that he fought the guy all the way out the door," Troyer said.

He added, "We hope that he hit him."

Troyer said the gunman entered the coffee house and walked up to the counter as if to place an order. A barista saw a gun when the man opened his jacket and fled out the back door. The man then turned and opened fire on the officers as they sat working on their laptops, killing the three men and one woman in what Troyer described as a targeted ambush.

Troyer said the attack was clearly targeted at the officers, not a robbery gone bad.

"This was more of an execution. Walk in with the specific mindset to shoot police officers," he said.

Troyer said the officers - all from the Lakewood Police Department - were catching up on paperwork at the beginning of their shifts when they were attacked at 8:15 a.m. Sunday.

"There were marked patrol cars outside and they were all in uniform," Troyer said.

There was no indication of any connection with the Halloween night shooting of a Seattle police officer. The suspect in that shooting remains hospitalized.

"We won't know if it's a copycat effect or what it was until we get the case solved," Troyer said. "We don't even have a suspect ID right now."

Troyer estimated that a couple of hundred officers from the Washington State Patrol and multiple surrounding police agencies in the area were at the crime scene, with some coming on their own time.

"We have no motive at all," Troyer said. "I don't think when we find out what it is, it will be anything that makes any sense or be worth it."

Two employees and a few other customers were in the shop during the attack. All were interviewed by the Pierce County sheriff's investigators.

"Some are in shock. They are very upset," Troyer said. "They are the ones who are going to put together for us how this happened."

The Forza Coffee Shop, part of a popular local chain, is on a side street near McChord Air Force Base in Tacoma, about 35 miles south of Seattle. The shop is in a small retail center alongside two restaurants, a cigar store and a nail salon.

Brad Carpenter, founder and owner of Forza Coffee, said his staff was OK and being interviewed by police, and that his main concern was for the families of the police officers.

"I'm a retired police officer, so this really hits close to home for me," said Carpenter, of nearby Gig Harbor.

Troyer said the Lakewood officers were two blocks outside their jurisdiction, and the coffee shop was a popular place for officers from surrounding jurisdictions to meet and share information.

Streets around the coffee shop were blocked off late Sunday morning, and a police helicopter hovered over a large crowd of investigators. TV video showed police taking possession of a pickup truck parked in a grocery store in Parkland.

Troyer said investigators were checking surveillance video from multiple sources, trying to identify a possible getaway car.

Dave Gabrielson, a clerk at Foot Mart about a block away from the coffee shop, told the newspaper all was quiet when he opened the store at 8 a.m. About 30 minutes later, "All of a sudden a million cops were zooming up and down the road," Gabrielson said.

He said he saw officers bring a police dog into a nearby apartment complex.

This is the second targeted police shooting in the area in the last month, reports CBS News correspondent Hattie Kauffman. Seattle police officer Timothy Brenton was shot and killed Halloween night as he was sitting in a cruiser with trainee Britt Sweeney. Sweeney was grazed in the neck.

Authorities say the man charged with that shooting also firebombed four police vehicles in October as part of a "one-man war" against law enforcement. Christopher Monfort, 41, was arrested after being wounded in a firefight with police days after the Seattle shooting. He remains hospitalized in stable condition, the hospital said Sunday.

The officers killed Sunday were a patrol squad made up of three officers and their sergeant. No threats had been made against them or other officers in the region, sheriff's officials said. Their families have been notified.

"We lost people we care about. We're working to find out who did this and deal with him." Pierce County Sheriff Paul Pastor told reporters at the scene.

Washington Gov. Chris Gregoire said she was "shocked and horrified" by the killings.

"Our police put their lives on the line every day, and tragedies like this remind us of the risks they continually take to keep our communities safe," she said in a written statement. "My heart goes out to the family, friends and co-workers of these officers, as well as the entire law enforcement community."

this man from my hometown he shotgun by 4 officers and he very dangerous man im sure he will get back in jail ASAP..

that totally unbelievable!!
 
Man Sought for Questioning After Officers’ Killings
LAKEWOOD, Wash. — Four uniformed police officers were shot to death Sunday morning as they sat in a coffee shop preparing to begin patrol, prompting a widespread search for the gunman, who remained at large.

Late Sunday, the authorities said they were seeking a “person of interest” in the shootings whom they identified as Maurice Clemmons, 37. They described him as having an “extensive, violent criminal history” in Arkansas and said he had recently been arrested in Pierce County and charged with assaulting a police officer and raping a child.

Nine years ago in Arkansas, The Seattle Times reported, Mr. Clemmons was released from prison after Gov. Mike Huckabee commuted his lengthy prison sentence, over the protests of prosecutors.

Police officials described how the gunman apparently caught the officers by surprise.

“Two of them were just flat executed, sitting writing reports,” Ed Troyer, a spokesman for the Pierce County Sheriff’s Office, said of the officers, who worked for the Police Department in Lakewood, just south of Tacoma. “One of them stood up and tried to go for the suspect and got shot. Then the fourth one fought his way out to the parking lot and fired off some rounds.”

The suspect fled on foot, but Mr. Troyer said investigators had evidence that he might have been injured by the fourth officer.

“We hope that he hit him,” Mr. Troyer said of the officer, who fired at the suspect before dying from gunshot wounds. “If he’s hit, that means he’s injured somewhere with a gunshot wound. He’s going to have to get that taken care of sometime, someplace,” he said.

After the coffee shop shootings, the gunman apparently fled into the strip-mall sprawl here, officials said. During the day, police sharpshooters positioned themselves outside a nearby storage facility, helicopters hovered overhead and groups of bystanders were warned that they could be in the line of fire. Mr. Troyer said later that some of the search had been in response to what he called a hoax — a man called the police and falsely said he was the gunman.

The shooting took place near two major military bases, McChord Air Force Base and Fort Lewis, prompting initial concerns of terrorism, but officials later said they believed that the police officers were the intended targets.

Mr. Troyer said a caller reported the shooting at 8:15 a.m. Witnesses told the police that the gunman had approached the counter and was asked for an order, the authorities said. The man then opened his jacket to reveal a weapon. The employee at the counter fled and heard gunshots soon after.

The officers who were killed were identified as Tina Griswold, 40; Ronald Owens, 37; Sgt. Mark Renninger, 39; and Greg Richards, 42. They worked on a patrol team for the Police Department of Lakewood, a suburb of 58,000 people. The force was formed in 2004 after the city took over law enforcement from the Sheriff’s Office. It has about 100 officers.

Mr. Troyer said the shooting did not appear to be connected to the killing of a Seattle police officer, Timothy Brenton, who was shot while sitting in a patrol car on Halloween night. Several days later, the police arrested a suspect in that shooting, Christopher Monfort. The Seattle police have said Mr. Monfort, of suburban Tukwila, also played a role in the firebombing of four Seattle police vehicles in October.

The Lakewood officers were shot at a Forza Coffee Company cafe, part of a chain of two dozen shops in Washington. The attack took place in unincorporated Pierce County, just a few hundred yards from the Lakewood city limits, in a small shopping center with a nail salon, a teriyaki restaurant and a cigar shop.

Mr. Troyer said he did not think robbery was a motive. Employees and customers were left unharmed, and no money was taken.

The coffee shop and other nearby places are popular among law enforcement officers because the area is at the intersection of the cities of Tacoma and Lakewood. “It’s a safe spot, it’s in a strip mall,” Mr. Troyer said. “It’s a place where they can plug in their computers, do reports, work and share intelligence with other police officers and agencies.”

Several residents of the nearby Willows apartment complex said the area had been hit recently by apartment and car burglaries, and at least two people said they had seen more unfamiliar faces of late.

“You hear shots from time to time,” said Lilah Casteel, who said she had lived in the complex for three years.

After the shootings, law enforcement officers from at least four departments set up roadblocks and searched streets, buildings and parking lots in a hunt for the gunman.

Brad Carpenter of Forza Coffee told The Associated Press that his staff members were answering questions from investigators. “I’m a retired police officer, so this really hits close to home for me,” he said. The employees, Mr. Troyer said, “were stunned and shocked, traumatized.”

A vigil for the officers was scheduled to be held Sunday evening at a nondenominational church in Tacoma.

interesting..... a person of interest commuted by Huckabee
 
interesting..... a person of interest commuted by Huckabee

If this person of interest actually committed this heinous crime, it will look not too good on Huckabee regarding to his possible candidacy as Republican Presidential nominee in 2012 U.S. Presidential Election.

Remember Mike Dukakis and Willie Horton about the furlough fiasco? It destroyed Mr. Dukakis' chance to become U.S. President in 1988.
 
Police: Suspect in police deaths hurt, maybe dead | General News | Comcast.net

Police: Suspect in police deaths hurt, maybe dead
By MANUEL VALDES, AP
25 minutes ago

SEATTLE — A suspect in the slaying of four police officers who were gunned down in a suburban coffee shop was surrounded by police at a Seattle house early Monday, wounded and possibly dead, authorities said.

Negotiators were trying to communicate with Maurice Clemmons, 37, using loudspeakers, explosions and even a robot to try to prod him from hiding. At one point, gunshots rang through the neighborhood, about 30 miles from the original crime scene.

"We have determined that in fact he has been shot," said Ed Troyer, a spokesman for the Pierce County Sheriff. "He may be deceased from his gunshot wound."

Clemmons has a long criminal history, including a long prison sentence commuted by former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee nearly a decade ago and a recent arrest for allegedly assaulting a police officer in Washington.

He went to a coffee house on Sunday morning and opened fire on the Lakewood officers, killing Sgt. Mark Renninger, 39, Ronald Owens, 37, Tina Griswold, 40, and Greg Richards, 42, as they caught up on paperwork at the beginning of their shifts. He fled but authorities believe he might have been wounded by one of his victims.

"We don't know if he's still alive. If he isn't, it's because he succumbed to the wound he received yesterday when he was in the struggle with the police officer that managed to get a shot fired at him before he was killed," Troyer said on the "Early Show" on CBS.

Police surrounded the house late Sunday, and a negotiator used a loudspeaker early Monday to call him out by name, saying: "Mr. Clemmons, I'd like to get you out of there safely. I can tell you this, we are not going away."

Any response from inside the house was inaudible from the vantage of a photographer for The Associated Press. But shortly thereafter, police began using sirens outside the house, and there were several loud bangs before the negotiator resumed speaking, saying: "This is one of the toughest decisions you'll make in your life, but you need to man up."

By 3 a.m. Pacific time, the loudspeakers and explosions had fallen silent. Seattle Police spokesman Jeff Kappel said Clemmons has never responded. It's not clear whose house it is.

Clemmons is believed to have been in the area of the coffee shop around the time of the shooting, but Troyer declined to say what evidence might link him to the shooting.

Investigators say they know of no reason that Clemmons or anyone else might have had to open fire on the four as they sat working on their laptops Sunday. Court documents indicate that Clemmons is delusional and mentally unstable.

"We're going to be surprised if there is a motive worth mentioning," said Troyer, who sketched out a scene of controlled and deliberate carnage that spared the employees and other customers at the coffee shop in suburban Parkland, about 35 miles south of Seattle.

"He was very versed with the weapon," Troyer said. "This wasn't something where the windows were shot up and there bullets sprayed around the place. The bullets hit their targets."

Officer Richards' sister-in-law, Melanie Burwell, called the shooting "senseless."

"He didn't have a mean bone in his body," she said. "If there were more people in the world like Greg, things like this wouldn't happen.

Clemmons has an extensive violent criminal history from Arkansas. He was also recently charged in Washington state with assaulting a police officer, and second-degree rape of a child. Using a bail bondsman, he posted $150,000 — only $15,000 of his own money — and was released from jail last week.

Documents related to the pending charges in Washington state indicate a volatile personality. In one instance, he is accused of punching a sheriff's deputy in the face, The Seattle Times reported. In another, he is accused of gathering his wife and young relatives and forcing them to undress, according to a Pierce County sheriff's report.

"The whole time Clemmons kept saying things like trust him, the world is going to end soon, and that he was Jesus," the report said.

Troyer said investigators believe two of the officers were killed while sitting in the shop, and a third was shot dead after standing up. The fourth apparently "gave up a good fight."

"We believe there was a struggle, a commotion, a fight ... that he fought the guy all the way out the door," Troyer said.

In 1989, Clemmons, then 17, was convicted in Little Rock for aggravated robbery. He was paroled in 2000 after Huckabee commuted a 95-year prison sentence.

Huckabee, who was criticized during his run for the Republican presidential nomination in 2008 for granting many clemencies and commutations, cited Clemmons' youth. Clemmons later violated his parole, was returned to prison and released in 2004.

On Sunday, Huckabee issued this statement on his Web site: "Should he be found to be responsible for this horrible tragedy, it will be the result of a series of failures in the criminal justice system in both Arkansas and Washington state."

It was the second deadly ambush of police in the Seattle area in recent weeks, but the two cases aren't related.

Authorities say a man killed a Seattle police officer on Halloween night and also firebombed four police vehicles in October as part of a "one-man war" against law enforcement. Christopher Monfort, 41, was arrested after being wounded in a firefight with police days after the Seattle shooting.

The officers killed Sunday had received no threats, sheriff's officials said.

"We won't know if it's a copycat effect or what it was until we get the case solved," Troyer said.

___
 
Man Sought for Questioning After Officers’ Killings


interesting..... a person of interest commuted by Huckabee

If this person of interest actually committed this heinous crime, it will look not too good on Huckabee regarding to his possible candidacy as Republican Presidential nominee in 2012 U.S. Presidential Election.

Remember Mike Dukakis and Willie Horton about the furlough fiasco? It destroyed Mr. Dukakis' chance to become U.S. President in 1988.

I refuse to get into political comments in this thread. That is something people would attack the Conservatives for doing. No point in using the same methods. Shit smells, no matter which bull dropped it.
 
updates from todaysthv

Wash. Police Shooting: A Family Member Speaks Out
Wash. Police Shooting: A Family Member Speaks Out - todaysthv.com | KTHV | Little Rock, AR

A family member of Maurice Clemmons speaks out to Today's THV expressing shock over the incident. But he also sheds some light on what may have led Clemmons to allegedly shoot and kill the officers.

We spoke over the phone with a family member from Marianna, Arkansas where Clemmons lived when he was young.

For now that relative wants to protect his identity; so we didn't include his name in this report.

Four police officers shot to death at Seattle-area coffee shop Sunday rattled not only the nation but the prime suspect's family too.

"It was something that no one in our family would think he'd ever do. It's as shocking to us as it is to everyone else," the family member said.

That relative says he last saw and talked to Clemmons during a trip to Seattle back in September. At the time, causing an event like this contradicted a spiritual change he saw in Clemmons character.

"Into God, he didn't want anyone cursing around him, says he was Jesus, all into the Lord," the family member said.

But that family member says if anything is to blame for the killings of four Washington police officers, it's Clemmon's long history in and out of prison.

"I'm thinking that right there probably pushed him over the edge," the family member said.

That relative says Clemmons felt he was mistreated in prison, especially during feedings in confinement. The relative says the state also ignored family members' appeals to get Clemmons a mental evaluation.

"I really think the system failed him because we've been telling those people up in Washington that he needs help," the family member said.

Today's THV also asked that relative if he had any idea where Clemmons escaped too in the days following the shooting and he said no.

He also said he has no idea where Clemmons wife may be. There was word earlier Monday evening from Washington police that she may be heading to Arkansas.

One final note, that relative says he's been in contact with the FBI about the shooting.
 
part 2 updates from todaysthv

Wash. Police Shooting: THV Learns More On Clemmons' Criminal Past
Wash. Police Shooting: THV Learns More On Clemmons' Criminal Past - todaysthv.com | KTHV | Little Rock, AR

After his several felony convictions, Clemmons was sentenced to a total of 108 years here in Arkansas.

Pulaski County Judge Marion Humphrey sat in his office Monday reviewing Maurice Clemmons' criminal history.

"It is just a horrible thing that has occurred," he says.

In 2000, Humphrey urged clemency for Clemmons. His consideration was based on Clemmons' age at the time.

"I do believe in mercy. I believe in a second chance. I'm a Christian," Humphrey explains.

Now though, he says he is horrified that the man he recommended for leniency would be accused of killing four police officers.

He says, "In his case, if I had any remote indication that he might do something like this then of course I would do something differently."

Maurice Clemmons was born in Marianna, Arkansas, and moved to Little Rock as a teen. He attended Hall High School up to the 11th grade.

In 1989, the 17-year-old was arrested and later convicted for bringing a gun to school. That same year he was convicted of aggravated robbery. He was granted clemency in 2000 after serving 11 years of a combined 108 year sentence. He then moved to a home on Winchester Street.

In 2001, he allegedly robbed a couple at gun point at a Little Rock hotel. Charges were later dropped because it took three years for police to serve the arrest warrant. However, he was sent to prison for another robbery from 2001 in Ouachita County. He was paroled in 2004.

Humphrey says, "It looked as though he was a person that was trying to make a change in his life."

In fact, Humphrey presided over Clemmons' wedding. Following the ceremony, the couple moved to Washington where his violence allegedly continued with eight felony charges. Just seven days ago, he was released on bond on a pending child rape charge.

Still, Judge Humphrey calls the Washington police shooting unpredictable. He explains, "I think there were a whole lot of opportunities where Maurice could have been held and a whole lot subsequent to him coming through here years ago."

Today's THV has have received information that police in Washington are also searching for Clemmons' wife. They say she may be on her way to Arkansas.
 
updates from CNN

Investigators round up suspect's relatives in police killings
Investigators round up suspect's relatives in police killings - CNN.com

Seattle, Washington (CNN) -- Investigators searching for the suspected killer of four Seattle-area police officers have rounded up several of his relatives and friends to keep them from helping him escape, a sheriff's spokesman said Monday.

Police have brought in five or six relatives and other acquaintances of Maurice Clemmons, "and we expect that number to grow," Pierce County Sheriff's Department spokesman Ed Troyer said.

Some of Clemmons' family and friends have been trying to help him elude police and seek treatment for a gunshot wound, and they have tried to divert investigators by calling in false leads, he said.

"What we're going to do is eliminate those people, so he'll have no place to go," Troyer told CNN. A raid in the southern Seattle suburb of Renton late Monday was aimed at cutting off Clemmons from that support network, he said.

Clemmons, 37, is an ex-convict with a long rap sheet in Washington and Arkansas, according to authorities and documents. He is wanted in what police called the ambush-style killing of four police officers from Lakewood, near Tacoma, about 40 miles south of Seattle. Witnesses say Clemmons was shot in the torso during the Sunday morning attack, and blood and gauze bandages were found in a truck linked to Clemmons, Troyer said.

The sheriff's department said associates who refuse to cooperate with the investigation could face criminal charges.

Clemmons is thought to have slipped away from a home in Seattle's Leschi neighborhood Sunday night, before police surrounded the residence for about 12 hours. He was not found in the home when the investigators moved in Monday morning, Seattle police spokesman Jeff Kappel told reporters.

His escape was "an unlucky thing for us, and a lucky thing for him," Troyer said Monday night. "But his luck's going to run out, because he doesn't have people to help him do that any more."

The slain officers, three men and a woman, were killed at a coffee shop in Parkland, a suburb of Tacoma. Early Monday, authorities started identifying Clemmons as a suspect, rather than as someone wanted for questioning.

The night before the shootings, Clemmons had threatened to kill police officers, but witnesses did not report those threats until after the slayings, Troyer said on ABC's "Good Morning America."

Clemmons was accused of child rape and assaulting a police officer in May. He had been released on $150,000 bond five days before the shootings, according to court records.

After his arrest, Clemmons' sister told police that he "had not been himself lately" and that his behavior was "unpredictable and erratic."

"He had said that the Secret Service was coming to get him because he had written a letter to the president," an affidavit quoted her as telling investigators.

In addition, neighbors had complained that he had been throwing rocks through their windows. Clemmons' wife told deputies that she and her husband had argued over a "newly discovered child," and she suggested that was why he went on his rock-throwing spree, according to an arrest affidavit.

In 2000, then-Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee commuted a 95-year prison sentence for Clemmons, according to documents from the Arkansas Department of Community Correction. He returned to prison in 2001 but was paroled in 2004.

"Should he be found responsible for this horrible tragedy, it will be the result of a series of failures in the criminal justice system in both Arkansas and Washington state," Huckabee's office said in a statement Sunday night.

During his 2008 presidential bid, Huckabee was criticized for granting clemency to another inmate, convicted rapist Wayne DuMond, who was later convicted of raping and murdering a woman in Missouri. Huckabee's statement brought a sharp response from Troyer on Monday.

"We're disappointed that Gov. Huckabee came out in the middle of the night without calling anybody here and blamed this on the criminal justice system in the state of Washington," Troyer said. "We're guessing that's probably a spin doctor, not him."

Sunday's shooting was the first for the Lakewood police department, which was created five years ago for the town of nearly 60,000. Until then, the Pierce County Sheriff's Department provided law-enforcement services there.

The slain officers were identified as Sgt. Mark Renninger, 39; Officer Ronald Owens, 37; Officer Tina Griswold, 40; and Officer Greg Richards, 42. All of them were parents and had been with the department since its inception.

"My worst nightmare has come true," Tiffany Ryan, Griswold's sister, told reporters. "I can't tell you how painful it is to lose my sister."

Police Chief Bret Farrar told reporters Monday that he has repeatedly been asked how the city's officers are doing.

"This is how everybody's doing," Farrar said, gesturing to the police force standing behind him. "They're here. They're doing their jobs. They're working hard. They're dealing with their loss. ... We're here to carry on. This is what we do."

The four officers "were good people," Farrar said, fighting to maintain his composure. "They were great officers, and we will all miss them very much."

The Lakewood Independent Police Guild is accepting donations for the officers' families, said guild president and Lakewood police officer Brian Wurts. Contributions have poured in from as far away as Switzerland, he said.

"I can't believe he was out on the street," Wurts said of the suspect.

"If they want to rehabilitate them, you can rehabilitate them -- but you rehabilitate them in prison, where they're supposed to be," he added. "This guy should have never been on the street."

The coffee shop on Steele Street is a popular hangout for law enforcement officers and is one of 22 Forza Coffee Company locations in Washington. The company's CEO, Brad Carpenter, is a retired police officer. In a statement on the company Web site, he said the shooting "hits extremely close to home to me."

Police said the gunman walked past the officers to the counter as if to order, then pulled a gun out of his coat and began shooting at 8:15 a.m. Sunday. Two of the officers were "executed" as they sat at a table, Troyer said.

Another was shot when he stood up, and the fourth was shot after struggling with the gunman all the way out the door, Troyer said. All were in uniform, with their marked patrol cars parked outside. Two baristas and other customers inside the shop were unharmed.

"Just the law enforcement officers were targeted," Troyer said.
 
I feel sorry for the kids of those slain officers. Now they'll never celebrate Christmas and all other special occassions with their dad/mum. :(
 
So, Huckabee and the judge released him based on religious reasons? That's chilling.
 
damn.... this is eerie. I told my best friend about this last night and I told him that the suspect will most likely get shot on sight.
 
Damn, he went all the way to Lakewood to shoot 4 cops and he lives in Seattle close to downtown? That's a really a crazed shooter.
 
Three people are implicated in this on aiding and abetting a known criminal.
 
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