Question: Do the Police “trust, but verify” when a domestic disturbance call is received – that it is not a “set up” to kill the Police? It seems to happen more often than not.
Again, this happens too often. Do the Police take any precautions, if not, why not?
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July 12, 2020
Two Texas Police officers fatally shot while responding to a domestic disturbance
By Kay Jones
The officers were shot by a suspect as they approached the door of a home, McAllen Police Chief Victor Rodriguez said during a press conference Saturday evening.
“The officers never had a chance to suspect a deadly assault on them, much less death, at that moment in time,” a very emotional Rodriguez told reporters.
Rodriguez said the police department found out the officers were shot when two other officers approached the scene to help and saw the officers were down outside the home.
The officers were identified by Rodriguez as Officer Edelmiro Garza Jr., 45, and Officer Ismael Chavez, 39. Garza had been with the department close to nine years while Chavez had been on the force for about two and a half years, according to Rodriguez.
When the two additional officers arrived, they ordered the suspect to drop his gun but the suspect shot and killed himself, Rodriguez said.
“We are weakened for the moment, but the strength and resolve we have to serve our communities, all of us here, will allow us to do what we do every day and what our officers do every day,” Rodriguez said. “In the face of adversity, we rise and we serve nonetheless.”
McAllen is located in southern Texas along the US-Mexico border.
The Texas Attorney General’s office said in a tweet that they would offer any assistance requested by the police. Gov. Greg Abbott tweeted that he reached out to Rodriguez and offered his condolences and full support.
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Trust, but verify.
kommonsentsjane