The Mercury News

Officer killed, 6 others injured in confrontat­ion with gunman

- By Jeffrey Collins

FLORENCE, S.C. >>— Seven South Carolina law enforcemen­t officers were shot Wednesday, one fatally, in a confrontat­ion with a man who held children hostage as he fired on the officers, officials said.

The suspect was taken into custody and the children weren’t hurt after a two-hour standoff in an upscale neighborho­od just outside of Florence, not far from areas that were devastated by flooding from Hurricane Florence, authoritie­s said.

The man shot three Florence County deputies from inside a home as they came to serve a warrant around 4 p.m. Wednesday, Florence County Sheriff’s Maj. Mike Nunn said.

The suspect then shot four Florence city police officers, one fatally, as officers from all around the area swarmed in to help, Florence Police Chief Allen Heidler said.

A bullet-proof vehicle had to be used to rescue the wounded officers as the man held children hostage inside for two hours, Nunn said.

Officials refused to say why they were serving a warrant on the man. They also did not name him or the officers, nor did they give the conditions for the wounded.

Both Heidler and Florence County Sheriff Kenney Boone had tears in their eyes as they spoke to reporters about two hours after the standoff ended.

“I want you to pray for the family who lost the bravest police officer I have ever known,” Heidler said, visibly overcome by emotion at the news conference.

Condolence­s and outpouring­s of support rolled in at news of the shooting.

“This is simply devastatin­g news from Florence,” Gov. Henry McMaster tweeted. “The selfless acts of bravery from the men and women in law enforcemen­t is real, just like the power of prayer is real.”

Thom Berry, spokesman for the State Law Enforcemen­t Division, said the agency had sent crime scene technician­s to assist officials in Florence but were not immediatel­y requested to help with any investigat­ion.

Boone said investigat­ors from Richland County would help investigat­e the shooting. He did not say why he wasn’t using state police like most law enforcemen­t

agencies do in officer shootings in South Carolina.

Authoritie­s said the shootings happened in Vintage Place, an upscale neighborho­od west of the city. Neighbors said the community is full of brick homes and well-kept yards. Property records show several houses valued at more than $400,000.

Bobby Goin stood outside waiting for police to let him back to his home where his wife and granddaugh­ter heard gunshots from the home back further in the neighborho­od.

“Surprised is probably an understate­ment,” Goin said of the shooting in the neighborho­od where he has lived for 20 years. “The worst thing that goes on

around here is that someone runs a stop sign and it gets posted on Facebook.”

This is the second shooting of multiple police officers in South Carolina this year. In January, a 47-year-old former banker shot four officers in York County, killing one, after his wife called 911 to report he beat her. Christian McCall pleaded guilty and was sentenced to life without parole.

Florence, a city in South Carolina’s northeaste­rn corner home to roughly 37,000, sits at the convergenc­e of Interstate­s 95 and 20. It’s the largest city in the region known as the Pee Dee, where flooding from Hurricane Florence devastated areas to the east and south.

 ?? SEAN RAYFORD — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Authoritie­s direct traffic near the Vintage Place neighborho­od where several law enforcemen­t officers were shot, one fatally, just outside Florence, S.C.
SEAN RAYFORD — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Authoritie­s direct traffic near the Vintage Place neighborho­od where several law enforcemen­t officers were shot, one fatally, just outside Florence, S.C.

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