Austin American-Statesman

Injured officer’s helpless words heard before dying

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A dying Missouri officer said over the police radio that he had been shot multiple times and didn’t think he could make it through the window of a home from which two other wounded officers managed to escape.

Clinton officer Christophe­r Ryan Morton is heard saying “I don’t know if I can move my feet” after gunfire erupted Tuesday night when he and the other wounded officers were sent to the wrong house while respond- ing to a 911 call made from another town, according to captured police scanner communicat­ions. The suspected gunman, James Waters, bar- ricaded himself inside the home after the initial hail of gunfire and then fired at the dozens of officers who rushed to the scene, refusing to let them tend to Morton, The Kansas City Star reported.

After Morton stopped responding, an officer pleaded, “Morton, stay with us. Stay with us, Morton.”

By the time law enforcemen­t made it back into the home hours later, Morton and Waters were dead.

Investigat­ors were still trying to determine if Waters shot himself or was killed by police, Missouri Highway Patrol Sgt. Bill Lowe said. The wounded officers were Nathan Bettencour­t, who was in stable condition Thurs- day, and Nicholas Kasper, who was treated for gun- shot wounds and released.

Sheryl Long, one of the neighbors who witnessed the gun battle, said the officers begged Waters during the standoff to let them tend to their fallen colleague.

“They kept calling his name,” Long said. “It was very sad, so senseless.”

Whoever placed the 911 call didn’t speak to the dispatcher, but two women could be heard arguing in the background, so officers were sent to check on the disturbanc­e, Lowe said. For reasons that authoritie­s are still trying to determine, the officers were sent to the Clin- ton home instead of where the call was made, which was about 15 miles away in Windsor.

Waters had been in and out of prison since 2000, mostly for drug-related con- victions.

Tammy Widger, 37, was taken into custody at the scene and charged with possession of methamphet­amine with intent to deliver and maintainin­g a public nuisance. She was being held on a $25,000 bond.

In a probable cause statement, Patrol Sgt. Brian Hagerty wrote that Widger told a fellow investigat­or that she helped Waters deal meth in exchange for him paying her bills.

Waters’ cousin, John Rudolph, said that Waters was troubled and “mental issues” and that despite his criminal history, he man- aged to get guns.

“My cousin was a convicted felon that had no right to any weapons, but at the same time he could get them . ... Something has to change. Something has to give.”

Morton’s friend, Aiza Evans, said that Morton knew the dangers of police work but was very patriotic and “passionate in everything he did.”

Morton, a twice-deployed veteran who joined the Army National Guard in 2005, took a temporary break from full-time policing last year to take a job with Veterans Affairs in the Kansas City area, although he remained a reserve officer in Clinton.

The break ended after a gunman fatally shot another Clinton officer, Gary Michael, in August.

Morton said in a social media exchange with Evans that Michael “fought til (sic) the end . ” Mort o n, who replaced Michael on the force, said he was “Just trying to help the PD heal now.”

Clinton, with about 8,800 residents, is about 70 miles east of Kansas City.

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