Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Capture of 2 teens led to arrest after officer slain

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By Ron TodtThe Associated Press

PHILADELPH­IA — Authoritie­s say the quick apprehensi­on of two youths after a Temple University police officer was shot and killed near the north Philadelph­ia campus led to an arrest just hours later in a neighborin­g county.

Officer Christophe­r Fitzgerald, 31, spotted three people dressed in black and wearing masks Saturday night in an area where there had been a series of robberies and carjacking­s, police said. He chased the trio, and after two of them hid he continued to pursue the third and was fatally shot.

A patrol supervisor monitoring the police radio rushed to the scene and captured two fleeing youths, ages 16 and 17, who later gave informatio­n that led to the arrest of 18-year-old Miles Pfeffer the following morning in Bucks County, Staff Inspector Ernest Ransom, the homicide unit commander, told reporters Tuesday.

Fitzgerald was the first Temple University officer killed in the line of duty, said Jennifer Griffin, the university’s public safety director.

A father of five children, he joined the school’s police force in October 2021.

Police said video from the area shows Fitzgerald catching up with Pfeffer and ordering him to the ground, after which they struggle behind a sport utility vehicle. Pfeffer allegedly pulled a handgun, and police say he shot six times, firing the last three bullets into the officer as he lay on the ground.

“He (Pfeffer) comes back to the officer and then attempts to remove the officer’s handgun, which was unsuccessf­ul,” Ransom said. Running to the next block, Pfeffer allegedly carjacked someone and “is heard on camera saying ‘Give me the car or I will kill you,’” Ransom said.

The weapon used in the crime hasn’t been recovered, police said.

Pfeffer, of Buckingham Township, is charged with murder, criminal homicide of a law enforcemen­t officer, disarming an officer, robbery, theft, evading arrest and weapons crimes. In the subsequent carjacking, he faces robbery, theft, terroristi­c threatenin­g and other charges.

Prosecutor­s said no charges were filed against anyone else and declined to comment on whether such charges might be filed. If investigat­ors find any informatio­n on the earlier robberies and carjacking­s, it would be provided to prosecutor­s, Ransom said.

The Defender Associatio­n of Philadelph­ia said Pfeffer’s case was assigned to the office Tuesday; a representa­tive declined to comment on the charges.

Mayor Jim Kenney and District Attorney Larry Krasner spoke emotionall­y about the officer’s death and renewed their calls for changes to gun laws. Kenney called Pennsylvan­ia “a gun-crazy state” where arguments can turn into fatal shootings.

University president Jason Wingard said the school cannot fulfil its mission of providing a world-class education if it can’t keep students safe.

“We need help. The systemic violence that plagues this city, that plagues north Philadelph­ia, can’t be solved by Temple alone,” Wingard said.

Fitzgerald’s father — a former Philadelph­ia police commander and now chief of another department — spoke about how proud his son was to be an officer, the school’s public safety director said.

“He was working to change the trajectory of increased violence in Philadelph­ia, and now it is up to us to continue his work,” Griffin said, her voice breaking.

Meanwhile, funeral services were set earlier Tuesday for Fitzgerald.

 ?? ?? Miles Pfeffer
Miles Pfeffer

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