Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Salinas officer shot during traffic stop

A suspect is jailed in the death, the first of an on-duty member of city’s police force in 80 years, mayor says.

- Associated press

SALINAS, Calif. — A police officer in Northern California was killed in an exchange of gunfire with a man he stopped for a traffic violation, and the suspect in his death has been arrested, authoritie­s said Saturday.

Salinas Police Officer Jorge David Alvarado pulled over a car about 10:45 p.m. Friday, and the traffic stop turned into a shootout, said Miguel Cabrera, a spokespers­on for the Salinas Police Department.

At a news conference with several officials Saturday, Salinas Police Chief Roberto Filice said Alvarado’s actions during the confrontat­ion helped them arrest the suspect.

Filice gave no other details on the suspect or what led to the shootout.

“The officer stayed in the fight all the way to the end. Ultimately, he paid the price for it. He gave his life for it,” Filice said.

“The Police Department lost a son, but the community lost a hero,” he added.

Alvarado, 30, was a fiveyear veteran of the department.

His death was the first of a police officer in the line of duty in nearly 80 years in Salinas, Mayor Kimbley Craig said.

“Our community and our police department are devastated,” Craig said.

The Monterey County district attorney’s office has opened an investigat­ion because the case involves an

officer firing his weapon. Dist. Atty. Jeannine Pacioni said that her office will not provide any additional details until the investigat­ion has concluded.

Craig asked residents to show their support to the city’s police officers.

“They are hurting, and they need to know our community supports them,” she said.

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