Houston Chronicle

Officer who killed self was ‘great guy’

21-year veteran took own life at patrol station

- By St. John BarnedSmit­h, Andrew Kragie and Marialuisa Rincon

A Houston police sergeant who shot and killed himself Friday morning in his west Houston patrol station was a “great guy, a great personalit­y, a great human being,” Chief Art Acevedo said.

The 21-year Houston Police Department veteran appears to have shot himself once in the head, Acevedo said during a stoic news conference outside the Westside Patrol Station where the victim worked.

The sergeant, whom authoritie­s had not publicly identified as of late Friday, was married and had two children, ages 10 and 12. A source, who did not want to be identified, said the sergeant was 44.

Police found the sergeant around 8:35 a.m. inside a stairwell on the station’s fourth floor. No one had heard the gunshot. The fourth floor had been used as a jail space but is now closed because of structural problems, Acevedo said.

Officers working in the station decided to search the facility after they discovered at 7 a.m. the sergeant had not reported for work.

The department will conduct a full “psychologi­cal autopsy,” Acevedo said, as is standard practice after officer suicides.

The death is not the first to touch Westside Patrol in recent years.

Two years ago, 47-yearold officer Richard Martin died after a man fleeing police rammed him as he lay a set of strip spikes on the road. Then, a week later, another Westside officer, Jason E. Angeli, 38, shot himself in his car.

Prior to those two deaths, the most recent known suicide by a Houston Police Department officer came in August 2014 when 21-year veteran Rudolph Farias III, under investigat­ion in a ticketrigg­ing scam, fatally shot himself in a patrol car in a downtown police parking garage.

The death Friday shocked and saddened the victim’s colleagues and the rest of the rank-and-file, said Joseph Gamaldi, vice

president of the Houston Police Officers Union.

“Any time anything like this happens, it’s an absolute tragedy,” he said. “It impacts all of us, whether we knew him or not, because we’re all one big family.”

Suicide among police remains a persistent and troubling problem, killing more officers every year than incidents in the line of duty, according to informatio­n from the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Chiefs of Police.

Last year across the country, 108 police officers took their own lives, according to a study from the Badge of Life, a nonprofit aimed at reducing officer suicides and the impacts of stress and trauma on police officers and retired law enforcemen­t.

The study’s author, John Volanti, found that officers are eight times more likely to die by suicide than homicide and three times more likely to die by suicide than by accidents. Sergeants and higher-ranking officers accounted for 22 percent of law enforcemen­t suicides, and 87 percent of suicide victims last year were males. Firearms were used in about 80 percent of the cases.

Research from the U.S. Department of Justice likewise has found that the daily risk and responsibi­lities of policing put officers at a heightened risk for suicide, due to risk factors like “exposure to violence, suicide, or other job-related stressors; depression, anxiety, or other mental illness; substance abuse; domestic abuse; access to means to kill oneself (e.g., firearms); and poor physical health.”

At the Westside Patrol Station Friday, HPD psychologi­cal services and chaplain services were on site to counsel the victim’s friends and other officers.

“Everybody could see those officers were visibly shaken,” Executive Assistant

Support line

The Houston Police Officers Union operates a peer support line at 832-200-3499 to help officers in need. Help is also available at the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 800-273-8255.

Chief Troy Finner said.

Acevedo promised that the victim’s family would not bear the grief alone.

“We can’t explain these things,” he said. “We ask that people please just pray for the family, pray for those young children.”

 ?? Godofredo A. Vasquez / Houston Chronicle ?? Houston Police Chief Art Acevedo urged people to pray for the family after the apparent suicide of an HPD sergeant at his west Houston patrol station.
Godofredo A. Vasquez / Houston Chronicle Houston Police Chief Art Acevedo urged people to pray for the family after the apparent suicide of an HPD sergeant at his west Houston patrol station.

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