Vancouver Sun

Thousands mourn Baltimore officer slain in line of duty

Honour guards from around U.S. attend

- PETER HERMANN AND ANN E. MARIMOW The Washington Post

BALTIMORE • Thousands of mourners gathered Wednesday in Baltimore for the funeral of police detective Sean Suiter, an 18-year veteran fatally shot in the line of duty Nov. 15 while investigat­ing a 2016 triple killing.

Police department­s throughout the country sent delegation­s to honour Suiter, who was shot in the head while canvassing a neighbourh­ood, in a service that acknowledg­ed the violent environmen­t in which Suiter worked.

He “dedicated his life to working in unsafe places in unsafe times,” Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan told the crowd at Mount Pleasant Church and Ministries in Baltimore, which was filled to capacity with more than 3,000 people. Authoritie­s are still searching for the detective’s killer.

Suiter, who was 43 and the married father of five, is the Baltimore Police Department’s 137th death in the line of duty since a night watchman was fatally stabbed in 1808, and the 309th homicide victim in the city this year.

Throughout the service, Suiter was remembered as a hero, for his work ethic and smile by a series of speakers, including fellow officers, family members and Maryland leaders.

As a homicide detective, Suiter worked “to bring peace to families whose loved ones were taken away and here we are now, our loved one taken away,” said Detective Jonathan Jones, who was flanked by the other detectives from Suiter’s squad.

Beyond the tributes, speakers touched on unanswered questions surroundin­g Suiter’s shooting and concerns about public mistrust of police after officerinv­olved shootings.

Baltimore Police Commission­er Kevin Davis said “It’s time for the local and national narrative to start reflecting” the reality of officers like Suiter who “gave each and every day.”

“That’s the norm,” Davis said.

Baltimore Mayor Catherine Pugh said, “My heart grieves for our city.”

Suiter’s death, she said, was a reminder that “when we send folks to our streets to protect our city that they, too, are in danger” and she pledged to increase the number of police officers on the city force.

Suiter was raised in the District of Columbia and lived with his family in York, Pennsylvan­ia. A graduate of McKinley Tech High School, Suiter served in the U.S. army before joining the Baltimore Police Department in 1999.

He is survived by his wife, Nicole, two daughters, three sons and a granddaugh­ter.

The detective was shot at about 4:30 p.m. on Nov. 15 in a vacant lot strewn with trash and tree stumps located between two row houses on Bennett Place, in a West Baltimore neighbourh­ood called Harlem Park that has been beset by violence over the past several years. He was felled with his radio still clutched in his left hand, police officials said. Suiter was the lead detective on the shooting deaths of three men found executed inside a house on the same block in December, and had returned to follow up on new clues the day he was shot.

Baltimore police officials have said Suiter had confronted a man he deemed suspicious and during a brief but violent scuffle had his gun taken from him and was shot once in the head. Police have said Suiter’s gun was fired three times, and the assailant may have been injured in the deadly encounter. He died Nov. 16 at a hospital.

Police have not arrested a suspect despite an award that has climbed to $215,000 and a manhunt that has lasted for days and, for a time, locked down much of Harlem Park.

One of the first speakers at the funeral was Vernon Hill, a minister who said “those who perpetrate­d the

(DETECTIVE) DEDICATED HIS LIFE TO WORKING IN UNSAFE PLACES IN UNSAFE TIMES.

crime will not get away ... They will be prosecuted, will receive a just reward for what was done.”

Questions about the case have swirled amid confirmati­on that Suiter had been shot on the night before he was going to give testimony before a federal grand jury in a police corruption case that has ensnared eight members of an elite gun squad.

Baltimore’s police commission­er has said Suiter’s pending testimony and his shooting are unrelated, as many unanswered questions linger without a suspect in custody and only a vague descriptio­n of the shooter.

Police have said they may release additional informatio­n about the investigat­ion later this week.

T.J. Smith, the department’s chief spokesman, emphasized on a radio show Tuesday that Suiter confronted the man acting suspicious­ly in a spontaneou­s act. He “was acting on instinct,” Smith said, noting that video surveillan­ce shows some of Suiter’s movements that back Smith’s version of events. “People who think he was set up or lured,” Smith said on WBAL-Radio’s C-4 Show, “that’s just not consistent with the evidence we have.”

Closing out the service on Wednesday was Bishop Clifford Johnson, who addressed civic leaders. “Mayor, governor, commission­er,” he said. “There is hope.”

 ?? ALEX WROBLEWSKI / GETTY IMAGES ?? Mourners gather for the funeral of Det. Sean Suiter on Wednesday in Baltimore. Suiter, a detective in the homicide unit of the Baltimore Police Department, was shot and killed on Nov. 15 while investigat­ing a triple-murder case.
ALEX WROBLEWSKI / GETTY IMAGES Mourners gather for the funeral of Det. Sean Suiter on Wednesday in Baltimore. Suiter, a detective in the homicide unit of the Baltimore Police Department, was shot and killed on Nov. 15 while investigat­ing a triple-murder case.

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