Lodi News-Sentinel

5 dead, including 2 deputies, in N.C. standoff

- Hayley Fowler and Mark Price

A 13-hour standoff in North Carolina ended late Wednesday with five dead, including two deputies and the shooter, officials said.

K-9 Deputy Logan Fox, 25, died at the scene, and Sgt. Chris Ward, 36, died at Johnson City Medical Center in Tennessee, the Watauga County Sheriff ’s Office said.

The sheriff’s office identified the suspected shooter as 32year-old Isaac Alton Barnes, who also died at the scene. He’s accused of killing the deputies as well as his mother, 61-yearold Michelle Annette Ligon, and stepfather, 58-year-old George Wyatt Ligon.

A Boone police officer was hit with gunfire during a rescue attempt but was uninjured.

“This is an incredibly tragic situation and our thoughts and prayers are with everyone involved as well as their families and our community,” Watauga County Sheriff Len Hagaman said in a statement. “I greatly appreciate the tremendous support we are receiving from law enforcemen­t agencies across the region and the state.”

The standoff unfolded in the Western North Carolina town of Boone, about 100 miles northwest of Charlotte.

Investigat­ors say it began shortly before 10 a.m. when deputies conducted a welfare check on Hardaman Circle after the homeowner’s employer said he didn’t show up for work or answer the phone.

“Deputies entered the residence after discoverin­g all vehicles belonging to the residents were on the property. Upon entering the home, two Watauga County Sheriff ’s deputies received gunshot wounds from an unknown individual within the residence,” the department said.

The shooter, who was barricaded inside the home, “periodical­ly” fired toward deputies, officials said.

Residents in the Hardaman Circle area were told to stay in their homes with their doors and windows closed, Watauga County Emergency Services said. The residentia­l street is about six miles from Appalachia­n State

University. App State Police said there was no threat to the campus.

By 5 p.m. Wednesday, the sheriff’s office said one of the deputies was still in the house with the shooter and the second had been flown to the hospital for treatment.

More than a dozen law enforcemen­t agencies responded to the scene, including the North Carolina State Bureau of Investigat­ion and the North Carolina State Highway Patrol.

The standoff ended shortly before 11 p.m.

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