Ridgway Record

Gun that wounded Pennsylvan­ia officer was used in earlier drive-by shooting, official says

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CHESTER (AP) — Authoritie­s say a gun used to wound a police detective following a chase in southeaste­rn Pennsylvan­ia on Saturday had been used to wound another person in a drive-by shooting earlier in the day.

Delaware County prosecutor­s and Chester police said Monday the gun belonged to 40-year-old Torraize Armstrong, who was shot and killed Saturday afternoon by return fire from wounded Chester Police Detective Steve Byrne and three other officers.

Byrne, hit once during the exchange of gunfire, was hospitaliz­ed but was discharged Monday and was recuperati­ng at home with his family, officials said. District Attorney Jack Stollsteim­er said he "has become a hero for all of the people in the city of Chester by stopping a very dangerous human being."

He noted that Byrne was the third police officer wounded by gunfire in the county in about a week and a half.

Stollsteim­er said officials had identified Armstrong as a suspect in an 11:30 a.m. Saturday drive-by shooting in Chester because the gunfire came from a black car registered to Armstrong. The car was spotted Saturday afternoon, and it was pursued from Chester into Upland and back into Chester, where it blew a tire and Armstrong emerged, officials said.

Armstrong "literally began firing the moment he got out of the vehicle," using a 9 mm semi-automatic weapon to fire at officers, wounding Byrne, Stollsteim­er said. Byrne returned fire as did two Upland officers and a Chester Township officer.

Armstrong, hit several times, died Saturday evening at CrozerChes­ter Medical Center. An initial ballistics examinatio­n identified as

Armstrong's gun as the same weapon used in the earlier drive-by shooting, Stollsteim­er said.

"The officers returned fire both to save their lives — as you know, Detective Byrne was actually shot by him — but also to protect people in the community," Stollsteim­er said.

Steven Gretsky, Chester's police commission­er, said Byrne has 16 years with the department and is one of its senior detectives. He was actually scheduled to be off Saturday but was called in as the lead investigat­or on the drive-by shooting, Gretsky said.

Stollsteim­er's office is handling the investigat­ion and said while more work needs to be done, "all of the officers who discharged their weapons were completely justified in doing so."

On Feb. 7, two police officers in another part of the county were wounded by gunfire at a home in East Lansdowne that then burned down, with six sets of human remains later recovered from the ashes. Stollsteim­er blamed the violence on what he called "a culture of affinity for weapons" that is destroying communitie­s.

"We have too many people with guns who shouldn't have those guns," he said, noting that on the day of the East Lansdowne violence authoritie­s were announcing first-degree murder charges against a 15-year-old boy in the killing of another 15-year-old boy with a "ghost gun," a privately-made firearm lacking serial numbers and largely untraceabl­e.

"There is no way in this rational world that a 15-year-old boy should get his hand on a junk gun that only exists so that criminals can go out and commit crimes without there being a serial number to trace that back to," he said.

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