Miami Herald (Sunday)

Violent week a grim sign as targeted killings of police rise

- BY GENE JOHNSON Associated Press

SEATTLE

The shooting deaths of two Connecticu­t officers and wounding of a third punctuated an especially violent week for police across the U.S. and fit into a grim pattern: Even as more officers left their jobs in the past two years, the number targeted and killed rose.

According to organizati­ons that track violence against police, 56 officers have been killed by gunfire this year — 14% more than this time last year and about 45% ahead of 2020’s pace. The country is on track for the deadliest year since 67 officers were killed in 2016.

While the figures include a few officers killed by accidental gunfire, the number of ambushes in which police were injured or killed in surprise attacks with little chance to defend themselves has soared since 2020 and accounts for nearly half the officers killed this year.

Such an attack apparently struck Wednesday in Bristol, Connecticu­t, where the state police said Bristol Police Sgt. Dustin Demonte and Officer Alex Hamzy were killed and Officer

Alec Iurato was wounded when they responded to a 911 call that appears to have been “a deliberate act to lure law enforcemen­t to the scene.”

At least 11 police officers were shot around the country this week, including one fatally in Greenville, Mississipp­i, and another in Las Vegas.

“Those are really scary numbers for law enforcemen­t, not just for individual officers, but for the organizati­ons they work for, which have to be taking this into account as they’re hiring, retaining and training officers,” said Bill Alexander, executive director of the National Law Enforcemen­t Officers Memorial, which tracks officer deaths in the line of duty.

“It’s not lost on the officers that the job they signed up for has become more dangerous,” he said. “That has to be taking a significan­t mental toll on the agencies at large and the individual officers doing the work.”

An off-duty officer was among five people killed in a shooting rampage by a 15-year-old boy in Raleigh, North Carolina, on Thursday evening, but it wasn’t clear if the officer was targeted. In late June, a man in the Appalachia­n foothills of eastern Kentucky opened fire on officers serving a warrant in a domestic violence case, killing three and wounding five others — a scene that deputies called “pure hell.”

The Fraternal Order of Police reported that through Sept. 30 of this year, there had been 63 ambush-style attacks in which officers were wounded, with 93 officers shot, 24 fatally. That’s a lower number of such attacks than the first nine months of 2021, when there were 75 ambushes of officers, with 93 shot and 21 killed. The total number of ambushes in which police were hurt last year more than doubled from 2020.

The increase in ambushes and killings of police comes at a time when many department­s around the country face staffing shortages, with some agencies down hundreds of officers and struggling to fill vacancies.

Mike Zaro is the police chief in Lakewood, Washington, a city of about 60,000 people where four officers were assassinat­ed at a coffee shop in 2009. He was the assistant chief at the time, and he said the department continues to see officers retiring early due to anxiety and stress that can be traced back to the attack.

“I started back in the early ‘90s, and back then and for a long time you just sucked it up and moved on whenever you dealt with any trauma related to the job, whether it was someone else’s or your own,” Zaro said. “After 2009, something of that magnitude, we recognized we had to try and do something different. We worked on the fly to develop methods of encouragin­g people to seek help. … Eventually it became ingrained in what we do. Today it’s called officer wellness.”

 ?? JESSICA HILL AP ?? Police officers in Bristol, Conn., console one another at the scene where two police officers were killed Thursday in what officials are calling an ambush against the officers who were responding to a domestic disturbanc­e call to 911.
JESSICA HILL AP Police officers in Bristol, Conn., console one another at the scene where two police officers were killed Thursday in what officials are calling an ambush against the officers who were responding to a domestic disturbanc­e call to 911.

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