The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Slaying was retaliatio­n for Friday arrest of the man’s friend, GBI says.

- By Asia Simone Burns asia.burns@ajc.com

A suspect was captured a day after a Middle Georgia police officer was shot and killed outside the police station where he worked, according to the GBI.

Damien Anthony Ferguson, who was sought in connection with the death of 26-year-old Dylan Harrison, was taken into custody shortly before 2:30 p.m. Sunday, GBI spokeswoma­n Natalie Ammons said at a Sunday evening news conference.

Ferguson, who was arrested at his home in Alamo, was charged with murder in addition to an aggravated stalking charge related to a previous domestic incident, Ammons said. He is being held at the Laurens County Jail in Dublin.

Police had been searching for Ferguson since the officer was gunned down outside the Alamo Police Department about 1 a.m. Saturday, officials said. Harrison was working his first shift as a parttime officer with the department at the time of his death.

At Sunday’s news conference, GBI Special Agent in Charge Lindsey Wilkes said the ambush on Harrison stemmed from the Friday night arrest of another man.

Harrison was on duty when he made contact with the other man for a traffic violation in the parking lot of the Circle K across the street from the Alamo Police Department. The officer asked the man for his name and identifica­tion and the man refused, Wilkes said. The man argued with Harrison, and it escalated to the man pushing the officer.

When Harrison attempted to place the man under arrest, the man did not comply and Harrison discharged his stun gun. That man — whose name was not released Sunday — was arrested and taken to the Wheeler County Jail.

“The man arrested is a known associate of Damien Ferguson,” Wilkes said. “It is believed that the ambushstyl­e attack on Officer Harrison was retaliatio­n for the incident and arrest of the man on Friday night at the Circle K.”

Harrison was also a fulltime Oconee Drug Task Force agent in nearby Dodge County. He was the first Alamo officer killed in the

line of duty, according to the Officer Down Memorial Page that tracks law enforcemen­t deaths. In January, Alamo police Officer Arturo Villegas died from COVID-19 complicati­ons.

At least five Georgia officers have been killed in the line of duty this year, but nearly two dozen more have died from COVID-19, according to the page. Seven Georgia officers were killed in the line of duty in 2020.

Harrison, who lived in Laurens County, is survived by his wife and their 6-monthold son, officials said.

After the shooting, the GBI issued a “Blue Alert” for Ferguson and offered a $17,500 reward for the 43-year-old man’s capture. Such alerts are issued when a suspect accused of killing or seriously injuring a law enforcemen­t officer remains at large.

The Georgia Department of Public Safety said in a tweet Sunday that Ferguson was taken into custody “without incident” less than a mile from the site of the fatal shooting.

Ferguson spent more than seven years in prison after being convicted of charges including theft by taking and aggravated assault on an officer in Wheeler County. He was released from the Coffee Correction­al Facility in August 2006, Georgia Department of Correction­s records show.

 ?? ?? Damien Ferguson was arrested in connection with the fatal shooting of an Alamo officer.
Damien Ferguson was arrested in connection with the fatal shooting of an Alamo officer.
 ?? ?? Officer Dylan Harrison was shot and killed Saturday morning.
Officer Dylan Harrison was shot and killed Saturday morning.

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