This past year has been punctuated by intense bursts of violence against our
nation’s peace officers. Fifteen law enforcement officers have been shot
to death over the last 12 months in just five separate multiple-death
incidents.
The most recent of these heinous acts occurred just after 8 am, on Sunday,
November 29, 2009, when a lone gunman walked into a Pierce County, Washington
coffee shop and opened fire on four officers from the Lakewood (WA) Police
Department who were going over plans for their upcoming shift. The four
officers killed that day were Sergeant Mark Renninger, and Officers Tina
Griswold, Ronald Owens and Greg Richards.
None of the civilians in the coffee shop was targeted or
injured. All evidence in the case points to the fact that these four
outstanding law enforcement professionals were murdered in cold blood simply
because they were cops. The assailant was later shot and killed while
trying to pull a gun on a lone Seattle police officer who had confronted him on
a city street in the middle of the night.
Brian D. Wurts, President of the Lakewood Police Independent Guild, helped
us all to have a better understanding of the four brave and devoted officers we
lost on November 29. He said Mark Renninger was “the go to guy for
everything. He was the most competent and tactically proficient man I ever
knew in police work.” He called Ronnie Owens “the laid back dirt bike
riding cop you would always want at a party or with you on any
call.” According to Officer Wurts, Tina Griswold “was the toughest little
cop I have ever known.” Greg Richards was described as “a great cop who
cared about one thing above all else, his family.”
Records kept by the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund in
Washington, DC, reveal that more than 1,600 other law enforcement officers have
been similarly ambushed and killed by cold-blooded assassins.
Officer
Jerry Haaf
One of those fallen heroes was Jerry Haaf, a Minneapolis police officer who
was shot in the back while having a cup of coffee. It happened during the early
morning hours of September 25, 1992. Officer Haaf was nearing the end of
his shift, and he stopped by a favorite cop hangout to get a cup of coffee and
finish some paperwork. He never saw the two gang members enter the dimly
lit restaurant. He didn’t even have a chance to draw his weapon. The
murderers quickly walked up behind him, shot him twice in the back and then ran
out the door. The entire incident lasted less than 30 seconds. It
turns out that the gang members who committed the cowardly assassination didn’t
even know Officer Haaf. They just wanted to kill a police officer.
Officer Eddie Byrne
Few law enforcement fatalities received more national attention than in 1988
when a 22-year-old New York City police officer named Eddie Byrne was
assassinated while sitting in his patrol car guarding the home of a witness in
a drug case. Prosecutors said the hit was ordered from behind bars by a
jailed druglord. The man wanted a cop dead—any cop—and the killers were to
split $8,000 for the job. Soon after his son’s murder, Eddie’s father,
Matt Byrne, spoke to the citizens of New York City and offered a chilling
assessment of his son’s assassination. He said, “If they can put five
bullets in the back of my son’s head while he sits in a radio car, they can get
you, too.”
In 1994, Bennie Lee Lawson was worried about his tarnished image among his
fellow gang members. He had recently been questioned by DC homicide
detectives about his suspected role in a triple murder. No arrests had yet
been made, but word on the street was that Lawson was cooperating with
police. He had been labeled a “snitch,” and to Lawson that was a fate
worse than death.
So, around 3:30 pm, on November 22, Lawson walked into Metropolitan Police
Headquarters determined to clear his name. Without saying a word, Lawson
pulled out a Mac 11 assault weapon and began shooting. During the next
terror-filled moments, more than 40 shots were exchanged between Lawson and the
four officers in the room.
Sergeant
Henry Daly
Special
Agent Martha Martinez
Special
Agent Mike Miller
When it was over, four people were dead. They included DC
Metroplitan Police Sergeant Henry Daly, and FBI Special Agents Martha
Martinez and Mike Miller. Lawson did not know any of them. He simply
wanted to kill some cops. When it was over, Lawson put a gun to his head and
pulled the trigger.
Ralph McLean did not know Bennie Lawson, but he did share his hatred for
police. During the first half of 1995, McLean launched four separate
attacks on DC-area law enforcement officers, killing two of them. On April
26, Prince George’s County (MD) Police Corporal John Novabilski was working off
duty as a security guard for a local liquor store. He was in uniform and
sitting in his marked patrol cruiser. Without any warning or provocation,
McLean walked up to the car and opened fire. Corporal Novabilski was hit
at least 10 times and died.
McLean would strike again a month later. Police had received a tip that
McLean was stalking police officers, so they lured him to a school parking lot
hoping to make an arrest. It was about 1 am. The team of 27 investigators
were spread out so they wouldn’t be spotted. But McLean apparently sensed
that the police were waiting for him. He silently emerged from the nearby
woods and bushes, snuck up on FBI Special Agent William Christian and shot him
several times through the driver side window of his car.
The other officers immediately gave chase and a furious gun battle
ensued. When police had their suspect cornered, McLean turned the gun on
himself and committed suicide. There was no motive in either murder,
except that McLean hated police and wanted to kill them.
On October 12, 1999, a man bent on revenge because of a domestic violence
arrest, faked a 911 call for help. As the law enforcement officers arrived
on the scene one-by-one, he assassinated them and waited for more. When
the shooting had stopped three officers were killed, including Texas Trooper
Terry Miller and Atascosa County Deputy Sheriffs Thomas Monse Jr. and Mark
Stephenson. Two other officers were wounded before the assailant committed
suicide.
Brian Wurts summed up his feelings about the
loss of his four friends and colleagues in Lakewood by saying, “As our
Department weeps we know our brothers and sisters are in a place where people
don’t come in a calm place and take your life because of the shield you wear or
the basic oath we took.”
"Reprinted with permission of the author
and AMERICAN POLICE BEAT."
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