Marin Independent Journal

Fargo officer killed in ambush remembered as `brave young man'

- By Jack Dura

Jake Wallin was once a small boy who sought comfort in the arms of family, terrified of fireworks that lit up the sky. On Saturday, the Fargo police officer was remembered for growing up to be a military veteran and dedicated officer whose “final act of valor” was staring down the face of a man intent on bloodshed.

Wallin, 23, was killed July 14 when a man armed with 1,800 rounds of ammunition, multiple guns and explosives ambushed officers responding to a routine traffic crash. Two other officers and a civilian were wounded before a fourth officer returned fire, killing gunman Mohamad Barakat. Police said the actions of the fourth officer likely spared the city a bigger, bloodier attack.

Wallin, who had been sworn in as a Fargo police officer in April and was still in field training, was cremated in his uniform. On Saturday, the Fargo Police Department escorted his cremains to Pequot Lakes, Minnesota, for his funeral service, which was attended by loved ones, dignitarie­s and law enforcemen­t agencies from across the country.

The police procession of 10 squad cars and three buses carrying department employees left Fargo early Saturday for Pequot Lakes. Dozens of people were at the memorial honoring Wallin at the site of the shooting as the procession went past, KFGO reported.

Wallin previously served in the Minnesota Army National Guard and was deployed to Afghanista­n and Iraq from November 2020 to July 2021, according to a spokespers­on for the Minnesota National Guard.

He received final military honors at a private interment.

“He served his country, came back here and wanted nothing more but to serve in a position with purpose and meaning — his exact words — and he did that,” Fargo Police Chief David Zibolski said at a media briefing after the shooting.

Zibolski on Saturday recounted Wallin's impressive quality as a candidate in his officer interview last fall, how he excelled in the police academy, and strived for a job with meaning and purpose.

The chief shared that body-camera footage of the shooting showed Wallin “hurried to create distance, intuitivel­y” after his fellow officers were hit, pulled his gun out and was taking aim at the gunman when he was fatally struck.

“His final act of valor was to selflessly face the shooter and attempt to neutralize

him to save others,” Zibolski said. “His actions were valorous and exemplify the highest standards of the policing profession.”

Aunt Jodi Wallin recounted her nephew as “the little boy I adored who grew into the young man I admired and was oh so proud of.”

Wallin had recently purchased a house for himself and his fiancée, and “was so proud of becoming a new homeowner that he ran right out and bought himself a lawnmower and mowed his new lawn,” his aunt said.

“I remember him as a small boy with his little arms wrapped so tightly around my neck, burying his face into me to try to avoid the fireworks that he hated so much at that age,” she said. “From that timid, small boy, he grew to be a driven, ambitious, brave young man.”

Chaplain Jordan Helming, who served with Wallin in Iraq, recalled his dedication as a soldier and his positive personalit­y amid a changing mission as well as restrictio­ns of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“Jake could see the big picture in life, and he realized that it took long, discipline­d, steady efforts to get you to the top of the mountain,” Helming said.

Wallin's parents received two Fargo police awards and the Minnesota Distinguis­hed Service Medal in honor of their son at the service.

Law enforcemen­t agencies from other states attended Wallin's funeral. A caravan including Sioux Falls police and South Dakota Highway Patrol left Sioux Falls, South Dakota, on Friday to make the fiveand-a-half hour trip for the funeral, KELO-TV reported.

Dignitarie­s at the funeral service included Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz and U.S. Sen. Amy Klobuchar.

A public memorial service is planned for Wednesday in Fargo. North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum will attend and give remarks, his spokesman said.

On Friday, North Dakota Attorney General Drew Wrigley provided more details about the attack, which also wounded Officers Andrew Dotas and Tyler Hawes and bystander Karlee Koswick, who had been involved in the crash.

Barakat was a Syrian national who came to the U.S. on an asylum request in 2012 and became a U.S. citizen in 2019, Wrigley said.

Over the past five years, he had searched the internet for terms including “kill fast,” “explosive ammo,” “incendiary rounds,” and “mass shooting events,” Wrigley said.

 ?? DAVID SAMSON — FORUM COMMUNICAT­IONS CO. VIA AP, POOL ?? Fargo Police Chief David Zibolski speaks during funeral services for Officer Jake Wallin at Pequot Lakes High School in Pequot Lakes, Minn., on Saturday. Wallin, 23, was killed July 14 when a man armed with 1,800 rounds of ammunition, multiple guns and explosives ambushed officers responding to a routine traffic crash.
DAVID SAMSON — FORUM COMMUNICAT­IONS CO. VIA AP, POOL Fargo Police Chief David Zibolski speaks during funeral services for Officer Jake Wallin at Pequot Lakes High School in Pequot Lakes, Minn., on Saturday. Wallin, 23, was killed July 14 when a man armed with 1,800 rounds of ammunition, multiple guns and explosives ambushed officers responding to a routine traffic crash.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States