Chattanooga Times Free Press

FBI: 2 agents killed, 3 wounded, shooting suspect dead in Florida

- BY TERRY SPENCER AND MICHAEL BALSAMO

SUNRISE, Fla. — Two FBI agents were killed and three wounded in a shooting that erupted on Tuesday when they arrived to search an apartment in a child pornograph­y case, a confrontat­ion that marked one of the bloodiest days in FBI history. The suspect is believed to have killed himself.

The violence forced residents in the Fort Lauderdale suburb of Sunrise to huddle inside their homes as a SWAT team stormed the apartment building and police helicopter­s circled overhead.

FBI Director Christophe­r A. Wray identified the two slain agents as Daniel Alfin and Laura Schwartzen­berger, both of whom specialize­d in investigat­ing crimes against children.

Two of the wounded agents were taken to hospitals to be treated and were in stable condition, said Miami FBI Agent Michael D. Leverock. The third did not require hospitaliz­ation, Wray said.

The suspect opened fire on the agents when they arrived to serve a federal search warrant, George Piro, who leads the FBI’s Miami field office, said at a news conference.

“Today this grim reality

has taken two of our best from our family,” Piro said. “They were valuable members of the FBI and will forever be heroes. We will always honor their ultimate sacrifice.”

President Joe Biden offered his condolence­s during an immigratio­n event at the White House.

“They put their lives on the line and that’s a hell of a price to pay,” he said of the agents. “My heart aches for the families.”

Piro said the suspect would not be identified until his family has been notified. Based on a preliminar­y investigat­ion, federal officials believe he fatally shot himself, according to a law enforcemen­t official familiar with

the matter. The person cautioned that an official cause of death has not yet been determined and spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the investigat­ion publicly.

The shooting happened around 6 a.m. in a middle-class neighborho­od of single family homes, duplexes and apartment buildings located west of Fort Lauderdale, near the Everglades.

The gunfire erupted with about four shots — “Boom, boom, boom, boom!” said Julius McLymont, whose house borders the Water Terrace apartment complex where the suspect was barricaded.

At first McLymont thought the gunfire was a car backfiring, then two minutes later he heard about five more shots. He went outside and looked over his fence as police cars and ambulances rushed in. Then he saw officers working on someone lying on the ground before they loaded the person into an ambulance.

A SWAT team appeared next, with officers donning riot gear. Then they went around the building, yelling, “Go, go, go!” McLymont said. He said he couldn’t see the apartment where the shooting happened from his location.

Hours later, Sunrise Police urged residents of Water Terrace to remain inside their homes while law enforcemen­t blocked the entrances to their community.

The FBI agents had come to the apartment complex to serve a federal search warrant in connection with a case involving child pornograph­y and violent crimes against children, according to Leverock and FBI Agents Associatio­n President Brian O’Hare.

The shootings marked one of the bloodiest days in FBI history in South Florida and among the deadliest nationally as well, according to the FBI website.

 ?? AP PHOTO/MARTA LAVANDIER ?? Law enforcemen­t officers work at the scene of a shooting involving several FBI personnel serving a search warrant on Tuesday in Sunrise, Fla. Two FBI agents were fatally shot and three wounded. The suspect also ended up dead.
AP PHOTO/MARTA LAVANDIER Law enforcemen­t officers work at the scene of a shooting involving several FBI personnel serving a search warrant on Tuesday in Sunrise, Fla. Two FBI agents were fatally shot and three wounded. The suspect also ended up dead.

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