On this day, October 31, 1926, in Baltimore Police History, Patrolman Charles W. Robb [Northern District]took his own life out of shame for an accident that had occurred a day earlier [October 30, 1926], in which the vehicle he had been operating was struck by another, causing a permanent, life-threatening injury to one of the passengers, Miss Elizabeth Miller, who was in his care. Ms. Miller and her friend Miss Pauline Shaw were being escorted to Miss Shaw's residence in the 400 block of Hawthorn St. when the vehicle they were in reached the intersection of Charles Street and Cold Spring Lane and was struck by a vehicle owned and operated by Mr. Emil Stuart.
Patrolman Robb and his partner, Patrolman James Novak, had been transporting the young ladies in a departmental vehicle at the time. The driver of the striking vehicle, Mr. Stuart, was a student at Johns Hopkins University. He was transported to an area hospital for treatment, where he was also taken into custody, arrested, and charged with reckless driving, speeding, failing to yield the right of way, and failing to have an operator's card at the time of the accident. The two patrolmen, Robb and Novak, were both suspended by their captain, Frank R. Gatch, pending the outcome of the investigation. Reports at the time said the police car had been thrown 75 feet due to the speed and impact of Mr. Stuart's vehicle.
Patrolman Robb shot himself through his heart with an issued service revolver. Miss Miller died 2 hours later from her wounds. Those that think officers are some kind of machines that have no hearts and don’t care don't realize just how much this job takes from our police, and while this will unlikely ever officially be considered a line of duty death by the city or the city police department, we at the Baltimore Police Historical Society hope you will agree with us in feeling, as if his vehicle had not been struck that day, Patrolman Robb would have gone on to live a full and complete life. It was his heart, his caring for the community, and his being a Baltimore Police Officer—that he himself was the victim of an accident that ruined and eventually took the life of a girl that was in this officer’s care—that gave him a kind of PTSD, causing him to take his own life. For that reason, we feel his death was not only work-related but also caused by the job, and for that reason, we feel his life was taken from him in the line of duty. Therefore, we’ll put his name on this page and all other pages on our site, along with those of his fallen brothers and sisters.
Copies of: Your Baltimore Police Department Class Photo, Pictures of our Officers, Vehicles, Equipment, Newspaper Articles relating to our department and/or officers, Old Departmental Newsletters, Lookouts, Wanted Posters, and/or Brochures. Information on deceased officers and anything that may help preserve the history and proud traditions of this agency. Please contact retired detective Kenny Driscoll.
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5 May 1939: On this day in Baltimore Police History 1939, we lost our brother Patrolman Charles W. Frizzell due to injuries from a line of duty assault.
Patrolman Frizzell Succumbs In Hospital
The Sun (1837–1989); May 6, 1939; p. . 17
Patrolman Frizzell Succumbs In Hospital; Was Operated On Several Days Ago; Injured a year ago When Attacked By Prisoner
Patrolman Charles W. Frizzell, of the Eastern District, died last night [Friday, May 5, 1939] at University Hospital. His condition had been serious after an operation. Several days ago, emergency calls for blood donors had been issued several times within the last two days.
Patrolman Frizzell was assaulted about a year ago as he was taking a prisoner to a police call box. His fellow-officers said the injuries that led to his death appeared at that time.
Eastern District police said, however, that they have not definitely connected the assault with Patrolman Frizzell’s death. An investigation will begin today.
Patrolman Frizzell was 41. He was appointed to the force and assigned to the Eastern District in October 1932. He had been commended at least once and was injured several times in the line of duty.
More details
Name
Description
End of Watch
5 May 1939
City, St.
4940 Eastern Ave., Baltimore, MD 21224
Panel Number
N/A
Cause of Death
Surgery
District Worked
Eastern
POLICE INFORMATION
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A 33-year Baltimore police veteran was killed Monday evening in a single-vehicle accident in Pennsylvania while traveling to a training program, police said. Officer James E. Fowler III, of Catonsville, was driving through Lewiston Lewistown, Pa., at about 5:25 p.m. when his 2002 Chevrolet truck hit a berm on U.S. 22/322 west and came to rest along a concrete barrier on the left side of the roadway. Fowler joined the Baltimore Police Department in 1976 after he was honorably discharged from the U.S. Navy. The bulk of his career was spent in the patrol division and traffic investigations, Guglielmi said. According to a 1993 Sun Article, he was dispatched to respond to a citizen's call of a frantic woman screaming and helped deliver a baby in the back of a police wagon. Fowler had received medical training in the Navy and served as a volunteer medic with a Carroll County fire department.
Baltimore police officer dies in a Pennsylvania crash on way to training - Weather may have played a role in the death of the 33 year police veteran
September 28, 2010 | By Justin Fenton, The Baltimore Sun
A 33-year Baltimore police veteran who was nearing retirement was killed Monday evening in a single-vehicle accident in Pennsylvania while traveling to a training program, police said.
Officer James E. Fowler III, 61, of Catonsville, was driving through Lewistown, Pa., at about 5:25 p.m. when his 2002 Cheverlet truck hit a berm on U.S. 22 and came to rest along a concrete barrier on the left side of the roadway.
Inclement weather played a factor in the crash, police said, but the cause of death has not been determined.
Fowler joined the Baltimore Police Department in 1976 after he was honorably discharged from the U.S. Navy, and the bulk of his career was spent in the patrol division and traffic investigations, according to police spokesman Anthony Guglielmi.
"Officer James Fowler served the people of Baltimore as a police officer for nearly 34 years with honor and distinction, including earning a bronze star commendation," Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake said in a statement. "My thoughts and prayers are with his family during this painful and difficult time, and I join the citizens of Baltimore to express my heartfelt appreciation for his decades of proud public service."
Sgt. George Hauf, Fowler's supervisor in the accident investigation unit, said Fowler was a hard-working officer whose upbeat personality rubbed off on others. He volunteered for extra shifts and helped with menial tasks like making sure the station house was stocked with coffee and soft drinks.
"Probably his best quality at these [crash] scenes was that he was very good with the families," Hauf said. "Jim had a way with families. He could put them at ease."
Hauf said Fowler, who enjoyed hunting and fishing, was planning to retire in January. On Monday, he was driving to Penn State University to participate in accident investigation training workshops.
Police Commissioner Frederick H. Bealefeld III called the crash a "horrible irony," given Fowler's expertise at investigating crash scenes.
"The guy's got over 30 years of service to the city of Baltimore and died trying to go get skills to help make himself an even better cop," said Bealefeld, who recalled driving with Fowler through the streets of Northwest Baltimore as a trainee.
Guglielmi said Fowler won department commendations, including a Bronze Star for catching gun suspects and a citation for handling traffic during special events in 2000.
According to a 1993 Sun article, he was dispatched to respond to a citizen's call of a frantic woman screaming and helped deliver a baby in the back of a police wagon. Fowler had received medical training in the Navy and served as a volunteer medic with a Carroll County fire department.
"I had the baby's head in my hands," Fowler told the Sun at the time. "When the baby came out, it wasn't breathing, so I placed her on her side and let the material drain to clear her airway. … She started to breathe on her own."
Fowler wrapped the newborn in the mother's coat, laid her on her mother's stomach, and waited for an ambulance that took the mother and daughter to Sinai Hospital.
"It was kind of amazing," Fowler said. "I've seen a lot of things as a police officer, but this really gave me a great feeling."
Fowler was a graduate of Catonsville High School and Catonsville Community College, Guglielmi said.
He is survived by his wife and two children.
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More details
Name
Description
End of Watch
27 September 2010
City, St.
Accident in Pennsylvania
Panel Number
16-E: 27
Cause of Death
Auto Accident
District Worked
Traffic Division
POLICE INFORMATION
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On this day in Baltimore Police History, January 20, 1965, we lost our Brother Police officer, Charles R. Ernest, to a pedestrian-related auto accident based on the following:
At the intersection of Pearl and Saratoga St., Mr. Ferman Simmon and Mr. Louis Owen’s were involved in a minor traffic accident. Mr. Simmon was sitting in traffic when he was struck from behind. Mr. Owens had failed to stop for a stop sign (he was driving a 1959 Chevy) when he slammed into the rear of Mr. Simmon’s 1953 Ford. Even though their cars were operable, the two drivers failed to remove their cars from the street, causing a traffic backup.
It was approx. 11:15 a.m. on the morning of June 13, 1964. Patrolman Ernest and his partner, Officer Joseph Keirle, arrived to handle what, in terms of the Baltimore City Police Department’s calls, would be considered "routine.”. In more modern times, it would be a Sig 30. Patrolman Ernest examined the licenses and other paperwork that Mr. Simmons and Mr. Owens had provided while he and Mr. Simmons stood at the rear of the heavily damaged 53 Ford owned by Mr. Simmons, and the incident was being investigated. Mr. Owens was told to back his car away so Officer Keirle could better direct traffic around the scene and free up some of the traffic from the intersection. Mr. Owens jumped in behind the steering wheel, started the engine, and nervously put the car in gear. As most people are around Police, Owens was nervous, his anxiety as it was, He did not get the car into reverse but instead found drive, As he let up off the clutch while peering through the back window, his car lunged forward, He quickly went to push the brake, but again, his nerves got the best of him, and he pushed the pedal to the floor. Had it been the brake, he may have saved a life, but it was the gas, and instead of saving a life, he crushed the hips of two men between the cars.
Mr. Fermon Simmons and Officer Charles Ernest were powerless to stop the two vehicles from crushing them between the two, and in an instant, the pair were pinned between the cars. Mr. Owens immediately switched the car from 1st gear to reverse and backed his car away, but it was too late; the damage had already been done. When released from the massive trap of mangled steel and chrome, Patrolman Charles R. Ernest could do nothing but fall to the ground in horrific and unbearable pain.
The collision had shattered the hips, pelvis, and entire lower spine of both men. Patrolman Keirle immediately called for an ambulance and did his best to comfort his partner. The crew of Medic #1 (Ambulance #1) rushed to the scene and took the two men to University Hospital.
The hospital summoned Dr. John A. O’Conner, the official departmental doctor, to care for Officer Ernest. After a week in the hospital and several surgeries, Doctor O’Connor determined Officer Ernest would need long-term care and assigned Dr. Edward Wenzlaff as his primary doctor. When the immediate danger to his health had passed, Officer Ernest was taken from the hospital to his home with hopes of a full recovery.
At home, his wife, Dorothy, and daughter, Mary, were caring for him constantly; he seemed to be doing better. There was never a shortage of visitors. Unfortunately, things took a turn for the worse, and hopes would soon wane as there was a steady decline in his condition.
Though he had the benefits of the assigned physician caring for him, he did not progress the way Dr. O'Conner had originally hoped he would. On January 20, 1965, after multiple surgeries, numerous therapies, and 221 days of bed rest at his home, Officer Charles R. Ernest would suffer a severe heart attack and die, all as a result of the initial injuries.
Officer Charles R. Ernest served the department for 18 years and one month; he was a well-respected police officer. During World War II, he was a sergeant in the armory and faced the dangers of combat for little more than two years. In Baltimore, he spent almost half his life in the Western District, facing its dangers every day. In 1960, he was awarded the Silver Star after confronting an armed suspect and trading shots with him. A brave officer, he was never cavalier about dangerous situations; ironically, it was his keen sense of area awareness that kept him safe, a sense of awareness that was caught off guard by the usual routineness of a call like this. He could have never suspected that a call for a simple traffic accident would take his life. Which went on to teach future generations of police that there is no such thing as a routine call.
As his brothers and sisters of the Baltimore Police Department, we will not let him be forgotten, and we will take this time to remember him, think of him, and thank him for his service and sacrifice.
More details
Name
Description
End of Watch
20 JANUARY, 1965
City, St.
Pearl and Saratoga St
Panel Number
N/A
Cause of Death
Auto Accident
District Worked
Western
POLICE INFORMATION
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On this day in Baltimore Police History 16 September 1911 we lost our Brother Sergeant Joseph F Smyth in the line of duty to heart failure based on the following Baltimore Sun newspaper article dated 17 Sept 1911
One of the Most Popular Men in the Police Department Fell Dead
Serge. Joseph F. Smyth, of. the Central District, one of the most popular men in the Police Department, fell dead a few minutes after 10 o'clock last night (16 Sep 1911) on Lombard street, near Charles. Leaving the Lombard bowling alleys, where he had seen a number of young men rolling ten pins, the sergeant remarked to Patrolman Poske, who was with him: "Poske, those young fellows are having a good time." Were the last words that left his lips the sergeant collapsed and staggered to the pavement. "What's the matter, Sarge," asked Poske. He received no answer. Poske tried. to lift him to his feet, but Smyth could not rise.
Reaches Hospital Too Late
Hurrying to the nearest patrol box. Poske sent for the Central district ambulance. fellow-policemen lifted the sergeant into the patrol wagon and in a few minutes, he was at Mercy Hospital. Not until the body was put on an operating table was it found the Sergeant was dead. It seemed to Poske that "Joe," as Smyth was affectionately known to every policeman in the city, was only ill. Lieutenant Klinefelter heard the sergeant was ill and hurried to the hospital, but when he met Dr. Aubrey Lawson, the latter conveyed the story with one word "Dead." Big policemen, used to the world's weal and woe, gathered at the table on which lay the uniformed sergeant, tears formed in their eyes. Poske, known practically to everyone who frequents the downtown section after dark, wept in was deep sadness at his very threshold for the loss of his Sergeant and friend Sergeant Joseph F Smyth.
Four Cousins In The Priesthood
Sergeant Smyth was a member of a well-known family and four of his cousins, All of whom are brothers, are priests. They are Rev. Thomas G. Smyth, pastor of St. Ann's Church, Tensly, D. C.; Rev. James' A. Smyth, assistant pastor of St. Patrick's Church. Washington; Rey. C. Carroll Smyth, assistant pastor of St. Patrick's Catholic Church, Baltimore, and Rev. Tobu Carter Smyth. a member of the Paulist Order. who Is in New York. Another cousin, a brother of the four priests, is Patrolman William H. Smyth. Tr. The sergeant was only 34 years old. He was appointed to the force August 17, 1901. On. May. 1910, he was promoted to a sergeant. His promotion was the result only of a meritorious record. He was loved and esteemed by every policeman who worked under him.
More Details
Name
Description
End of Watch
16 September 1911
City, St.
Lombard street, near Charles 21223
Panel Number
N/A
Cause of Death
Heart Attack
District Worked
Central
POLICE INFORMATION
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On the night of August 15, 1974, in the 1600 block of North Bradford Street just before 9:30 p.m., Officer Milton Spell parked his car to begin foot patrol.
Officer Spell’s attention was drawn to a vehicle that was weaving side to side, traveling in the same block. Feeling that the driver may be intoxicated, he notified the dispatcher that he was attempting to stop the vehicle to investigate the driver. Following normal procedures, he requested a backup unit and continued to approach the vehicle.
Moments before the backup unit arrived, while Officer Spell was speaking to the driver, shots rang out from inside the suspect’s vehicle, striking Officer Spell. Officer Spell fell to the street with chest and abdomen wounds. The suspect and a companion fled the scene.
Officer Louis W. Michelberger was a little more than a block away when he heard the shots fired. He arrived to find more than 200 people standing near the fallen officer. Officer Michelberger attempted to save Officer Spell’s life using CPR. Officer Spell was transported to Johns Hopkins Hospital where he died, undergoing emergency treatment.
Officer Spell was a member of the Baltimore Police Department since 1967. He was 27 years old at the time of his death.
Slaying Suspect Arrested
Aug 17, 1974
The Sun (1837-1987); pg. B1
Slaying Suspect Arrested Man – 32 – Held In Killing City Policeman Police arrested a 32-year-old West Baltimore man yesterday for the slaying of the police officer who was shot while on duty Thursday night. Avon Mason Simmons, of the 1700 block of Mosher Street, was charged with homicide in the arrest warrant and taken into custody by two plainclothes officers without incident at 2:24 PM yesterday at Calhoun and Lafayette streets.
Also charged last night was Josepha Marie Herring, 26, of the 2100 block of Park Avenue, who police allege jumped into the assailant’s car after the shooting. She was charged with being an accessory after the fact.
The slain officer, Milton Spell, of the Eastern District, had been on routine patrol at 9:30 PM in his police cruiser when he pulled up behind a parked car he believed had been operated by a drunk driver in the 1600 block of N. Bradford Street. Police said Officer Spell asked the driver for his license and registration and was shot once in the chest and once in the abdomen by the occupant of the car. The driver then drove away. Officer Spell died minutes later on the emergency room operating table at Johns Hopkins Hospital. Police said the officer’s gun was still in its holster when a backup policeman rushed to his aid.
The car, which had been stolen a short time before the shooting, according to police, was recovered late Thursday night. Police did not disclose a motive for the slaying of the officer. There was another man with Mr. Simmons at the time of his arrest, according to police. He was being questioned last night by homicide detectives but had not been charged with a crime.
“I didn’t think too much of him wanting to be a policeman,” said Richard Spell, the dead officer’s father. “I knew somebody had to do it, and yes, I thought that someday something like this would happen,” added Mr. Spell, a 54-year-old assembler at General Motors. The officer lived with his father and three-year-old son, Milton S. Spell, in the 1800 block of W. Lanvale Street.
3 Tours in Vietnam
According to his mother, Claudia Spell, 44, of the 800 block of George Street, Officer Spell enlisted in the Army at 17 and served three tours in Vietnam in a special forces engineering detachment.
Family members said he was studying the violin and eventually wanted to pursue a career in music. “No mother really has a craving for her son to join the police force, but he wanted to do it and there was no way I could change his mind,” Mrs. Spell said yesterday. “I was always afraid that something might happen. But he’d say, ‘Mom, stop worrying about me, I’ll be all right.’” She added that he used to play his violin for her and in church.
Neighbors said he was helpful as a child and would run errands for persons unable to do so themselves. His estranged wife, Carol, 26, lived with their two daughters, Tonya, three, and Michelle, six, in Platteville, Alabama. They were due to arrive in Baltimore last night. His mother said, “He said to me last week, ‘Whenever I achieve what I want to, I’m going to have you right here with me.'"
Pomerleau Asks Study of Bullet Proof Vests
Donald D. Pomerleau, the police Commissioner, yesterday ordered a study of the feasibility of providing officers with lightweight, synthetic, bulletproof vests.
The action came in the wake of the shooting death of Officer Milton Spell, who was felled by a bullet in the heart. The other two city officers slain this year – Sgt. Frank W. Grunder, Jr. and Officer Frank Whitby – also died from chest wounds.
A police spokesman said the Commissioner had been looking at the possibility of bulletproof vests for some time, and yesterday ordered the planning and research division to make a “comprehensive study” of the cost and feasibility of such a program.
City to Get Bullet-Proof Police Vests
Jun 5, 1975
RICHARD BEN CRAMER The Sun (1837-1987); pg. C1
The city government authorized a $288,379 expenditure yesterday for more than 3,000 bulletproof vests for Baltimore’s police officers. The unanimous vote by the Board of Estimates, approving a $250,000 federal grant and adding more than $20,000 in city funds, marked the final step in the campaign begun by Donald D. Pomerleau, the police commissioner, after four policemen were fatally shot last year. All of Baltimore’s officers will be issued the nylon-substance flexible vests and covering garments. Experts employed by the International Association of Chiefs of Police reportedly consider the type of armor sought for Baltimore’s police the best protection available.
The vests, about 1 ¼ inches thick and weighing about 1 ¼ pounds each, are designed to protect an officer’s heart, chest, stomach, and kidney areas. Tests showed that the 12 layers of nylon substance, called Kevlar, can stop a .38-caliber slug fired at point-blank range toward an officer’s body. The major innovation of the Kevlar vest, according to Police Department experts, is the diffusion of the shock caused by the impact of the bullet. Other types of body armor, they say, will stop the bullet but will not diminish the shock from its collision with a body. The Kevlar vest is designed to spread the shock laterally so that bullet impact is less likely to cause internal injuries.
C. Edward Hawkins, chief of the Protective Engineering Group at the Edgewood Arsenal, told reporters earlier this year that a full-grown man wielding a sharp knife could not cut through all 12 layers of Kevlar which make up the vest. Kevlar yarn is twice as strong as steel wire of the same weight. City officials said yesterday they expect the vests to be ready for police use later this year. Only one other city, San Francisco, has its Police Department fully outfitted with the bulletproof armor.
Mr. Pomerleau accelerated the department study of body armor last August, after Milton I. Spell became the third policeman to die of gunshot wounds in 1974. A fourth policeman, Martin J. Greiner, 25, died in December of two gunshot wounds in the abdomen.
In other Board of Estimates action yesterday, the ARA Food Services Corporation lost a million-dollar contract to provide summer lunches for impoverished Baltimore children. The board awarded the contract to Marlin’s, Inc., the food service which runs Martin’s West and other banquet halls. The Marlin’s firm, which submitted an original bid $80,000 higher than ARA’s for the 1.5 million box lunches this summer, successfully argued that the exceptions ARA made in its proposal violated the city’s specifications.
After more than an hour of convoluted argument at the close of yesterday’s session, the five members of the board voted unanimously to take the contract away from ARA despite its lower bid. The two problems with ARA’s bid cited were the lack of a minority contractor to participate in the venture and a clause which would have allowed ARA to pull out of the contract unilaterally with no recourse for the city. Both the ARA and Marlin’s bids were below the subsidy level offered by the federal government. Mayor Schaefer praised both contractors, claiming that both performed excellently on previous contracts. His difficulty in choosing between them exceeded his impatience at the international hearings on the subject. “This food program,” he remarked, “is becoming distasteful.”
Court upholds conviction in '74 police slaying
Aug 25, 1976
ROBERT P WADE The Sun (1837-1987); pg. D3
Court upholds conviction in '74 police slaying
Annapolis - The conviction of a 31-year-old Baltimore man for the 1974 slaying of city police Officer Milton Spell was upheld yesterday by the state Court of Special Appeals. A three-judge panel also affirmed convictions against Hardy Herring for armed robbery and illegal use of a handgun.
The court’s decision, contained in a six-page opinion, leaves intact a life prison sentence plus 25 years for the armed robbery and gun charges imposed by Judge James A. Wise of the Caroline County Circuit Court. The case was transferred there from Baltimore City Criminal Court.
Herring is now an inmate of the Maryland. Penitentiary
Officer Spell was shot to death on August 15, 1974, during a routine check for “a possible DWI,” as he told police communications over his walkie-talkie just moments before being murdered. A “DWI” is a drunk driver.
The 28-year-old officer had been playing with a group of neighborhood children just before walking over to the car Herring was driving. The officer was shot twice and fell to the ground without pulling his revolver from his holster.
Herring was convicted of first-degree murder and of stealing the car, some cash, and a Masons ring. He agreed to talk only after being given assurances he would not be incarcerated at the City Jail, fearing reprisals for activities as a police informer. However, Howard Gersh, an assistant state’s attorney, told the trial court that his decision not to lock the man in the jail had nothing to do with Herring’s willingness to talk, but was based instead on a belief that Herring’s fears may have been well-founded.
The court rejected that line of reasoning, as well as an argument by Mr. Buchman that Herring’s act could not have been willful or premeditated because Herring was drunk.
More details
Name
Description
End of Watch
15 August, 1974
City, St.
Baltimore, Md
Panel Number
17-E: 2
Cause of Death
Gunfire
District Worked
Eastern
POLICE INFORMATION
If you have copies of: your Baltimore Police Department class photo; pictures of our officers, vehicles, and equipment; newspaper articles relating to our department and/or officers; old departmental newsletters; lookouts; wanted posters; or brochures. Information on Deceased Officers and anything that may help Preserve the History and Proud Traditions of this agency. Please contact Retired Detective Kenny Driscoll.
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NOTICE
How to Dispose of Old Police Items
Please contact Det. Ret. Kenny Driscoll if you have any pictures of you or your family members and wish them remembered here on this tribute site to Honor the fine men and women who have served with Honor and Distinction at the Baltimore Police Department. Anyone with information, photographs, memorabilia, or other "Baltimore City Police" items can contact Ret. Det. Kenny Driscoll at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. follow us on Twitter @BaltoPoliceHist or like us on Facebook or mail pics to 8138 Dundalk Ave. Baltimore Md. 21222
On this day In Baltimore Police History (1932), we lost our brother, Officer Thomas F Stienacker, to an auto accident based on the following:. On September 29, 1932, at 9:50 a.m., Officer Stienacker was crossing the intersection of Frederick Avenue and Willard Street. A motorist struck Officer Steinacker as he crossed Frederick Avenue. As a result, he was thrown against a United Railway and Electric Company street car. He suffered a fractured skull, lacerated head and ear. He succumbed to his injuries on October 4, 1932.
As his brothers and sisters of the Baltimore Police Department, we will not let him be forgotten, His service Honored the City of Baltimore, and the Baltimore Police Department may he rest in peace, and may God bless him.
More details
Name
Description
End of Watch
29, September, 1932
City, St.
Frederick Avenue and Willard St
Panel Number
16-W: 14
Cause of Death
Auto Accident
District Worked
Southwestern
POLICE INFORMATION
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Hogan: Maryland offering $100,000 reward for information on person who killed Baltimore homicide detective
The state of Maryland is offering a $100,000 reward for information leading to the arrest of the person responsible for killing a Baltimore homicide detective, Gov. Larry Hogan announced on Twitter Thursday evening.
This money is in addition to the $69,000 reward being offered by local authorities and the Metro Crime Stoppers of Maryland.
“My best hunch is more than one or two people know or suspect our killer was involved in this yesterday,” Police Commissioner Kevin Davis said at a Thursday news conference. “We’re asking those folks to do some soul searching and pick up the phone and give us a call.”
Det. Sean Suiter, an 18-year veteran of the city police force, was shot Wednesday afternoon while investigating another killing in the notoriously violent Harlem Park neighborhood in West Baltimore. The 43-year-old detective was a husband and father of five, who was described by other police as a dedicated officer. Suiter joined the city’s homicide unit in 2015.
“Everyone that worked with him loved him. Even when you were down he would smile with his mischievous smile and make everyone happy and feel at ease,” said Rick Willard, a retired officer who led a drug squad in the Western District of which Suiter was a member. “He is one of the best officers I ever worked with, and it breaks my heart.”
Suiter died just after noon Thursday at Maryland Shock Trauma Center, where officials say he was surrounded by his family.
Davis said police have encountered evidence suggesting the suspect was injured, but he did not elaborate. Police are searching emergency rooms and doctor’s offices for “anyone with an unexplained injury,” Davis said.
Hogan has also ordered the flags be flown at half-staff to honor Suiter.
"One of the Best Officers I ever Worked With"
Alison Knezevich, Justin Fenton, and Kevin Rector This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. Contact ReportersThe Baltimore Sun
As a young patrolman assigned to the Harlem Park neighborhood of West Baltimore, Sean Suiter impressed his supervisor as a conscientious and poised officer who “operated beyond his years.”“The writing was on the wall early in his career that he was going to ascend the ranks in any path he chose,” said Maj. Martin Bartness, who was Suiter’s sergeant 15 years ago.On Wednesday, Suiter was back in Harlem Park — now 43 and a homicide detective, dressed in a suit and tie. Police say he was working a 2016 homicide case when a man shot him in the head.Suiter, an 18-year veteran of the department, died shortly after noon Thursday. He leaves a wife and five children.Police Commissioner Kevin Davis called Suiter “a wonderful detective, husband, father, and friend.”“We remain dedicated and committed to finding the person who ended such a beautiful life,” Davis said. “We will find the person responsible for this ridiculous, absurd, unnecessary loss of life.”Suiter’s colleagues remembered him Thursday as a dependable investigator who was often smiling.“You will hear his smile come up again and again,” Bartness said. “He had the cheeks, and he was really quick with a smile. Whenever I think about Sean, it’s with a smile on his face. But he wasn’t clownish, and he was not the guy who was always ripping jokes. He was just very good-natured.”Suiter was born and raised in Washington, Davis said. He served in the Army, officials said and lived in York County, Pa.Det. Jonathan Jones was Suiter’s partner in the homicide unit. He was not with him when he was shot.Jones said Suiter loved the Dallas Cowboys. He was known among detectives as “Face;” on the street, citizens knew him as “Scar.” Both referred to a facial scar.Jones was with Suiter recently when someone shouted for Suiter. It was a man Suiter recalled chasing around the Western District. The man was now employed and thanked Suiter for the way he had interacted with him in the past.“This was Suiter — a great guy, and an even better detective,” Jones said.Rick Willard, a retired officer, led a drug squad on which Suiter served.“He was not only a good cop, he was smart and smiled a lot,” he said. “Everyone that worked with him loved him. Even when you were down he would smile with his mischievous smile and make everyone happy and feel at ease.“He is one of the best officers I ever worked with, and it breaks my heart.”Capt. Torran Burrus supervised Suiter at two different points during his career, when he was a drug officer and later when he moved onto a district detective unit.“He had a good keen eye for narcotics activity,” Burrus said.He said Suiter was known for his good nature. The detective had a “contagious smile” and a penchant for cracking jokes.Former Baltimore prosecutor Jeremy Eldridge called Suiter “a man with integrity.”“He was one person you could always count on,” Eldridge said. “Every time I called him, he answered.”Eldridge said he worked with Suiter on many drug cases.“He worked tirelessly to put together very well-thought-out cases,” Eldridge said.Suiter joined the city’s homicide unit in 2015. The first case he closed was the killing of Kendal Fenwick, a young father gunned down in Park Heights. Devante Brim has been charged with first-degree murder in Fenwick’s death. His first trial ended in a mistrial in June. He is scheduled to be tried again next year.Suiter was listed as the arresting detective for Elias Josael Jimenes Alvarado, the Salvadoran national convicted of first-degree murder in the deaths of two women in Northwest Baltimore in 2016. A jury in August found Alvarado guilty in the deaths of Ranarda Williams and Annquinette Dates.Before joining the homicide unit, Suiter worked in the citywide shootings unit, which investigates non-fatal shootings.In an email to the department, Davis said Suiter’s “tragic death will forever impact the BPD.”“Each of you goes out there and put your lives on the line every single day,” Davis wrote. “The importance of your sacrifice and Sean’s can’t be overstated.”
Baltimore Police Detective has Died, Department Seeks 'Heartless, Ruthless, Soulless Killer' in Shooting
Justin Fenton and Kevin Rector This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. Contact ReportersThe Baltimore Sun
The Baltimore homicide detective who was shot in the head Wednesday while conducting an investigation has died, police said.
Police identified the officer as Det. Sean Suiter, an 18-year veteran of the city police force and a husband and father of five. In an email to the department, Police Commissioner Kevin Davis said he died surrounded by his family.
“His tragic death will forever impact the BPD,” Davis wrote in the email obtained by The Baltimore Sun. “Each of you go out there and put your lives on the line every single day. The importance of your sacrifice and Sean’s can’t be overstated.”
Baltimore Police and their federal partners continued a massive manhunt Thursday for the suspect. Authorities offered a $69,000 reward for information leading to an arrest.
Davis said outside of Maryland Shock Trauma that police had “investigative leads” that they were pursuing, but were pleading for anyone with information to come forward.
“My best hunch is more than one or two people know or suspect our killer was involved in this yesterday,” Davis said. “We’re asking those folks to do some soul searching and pick up the phone and give us a call.”
Police say Suiter was shot in a notoriously violent section of the Harlem Park neighborhood of West Baltimore while investigating another killing. An entire city block remained cordoned off Thursday morning as police scoured the area and cadets began canvassing door to door for information.
Mayor Catherine Pugh reiterated Thursday that crime in the city was “out of control,” and asked residents to pray.
“He was well-respected, and he will be very sorely missed by everyone,” Pugh said.
Davis said late Wednesday that Suiter was in the neighborhood doing “followup” on a homicide case when he saw a man engaged in suspicious activity. Suiter attempted to speak to the man, Davis said, and was shot.
A police source, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the case publicly, said Suiter was in the neighborhood trying to find a witness for a pending case when he and another detective saw someone suspicious in a vacant lot in the middle of the 900 block of Bennett Place.
The two detectives split up, apparently to try to cover different exits of the block when the shooting occurred, the source said.
Davis said that police had encountered evidence to suggest the suspect was injured but did not elaborate. He said police were searching emergency rooms and doctor’s offices for “anyone with an unexplained injury.”
Authorities asked anyone with information to contact the Baltimore FBI office at 1-800-CALL-FBI, Baltimore police detectives at 410-396-2100, or Metro Crime Stoppers at 1-866-7-LOCK-UP. Tips can also be texted to Baltimore police via 443-902-4824.
The reward is being offered by the Baltimore divisions of the FBI, Drug Enforcement Administration and Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives, and Metro Crime Stoppers.
Gov. Larry Hogan ordered the state flag to be flown at half-staff, and in a statement that the “individual responsible for this heinous crime will be found, charged, and prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.”
“Baltimore Police has our full support as they track down this violent criminal and bring him to justice,” he said.
Suiter’s shooting, which occurred about 4:30 p.m. Wednesday, was the second of a law enforcement officer in West Baltimore this month. Sgt. Tony Anthony Mason Jr., 40, a District of Columbia police officer who lived in Baltimore, was shot to death in the 2800 block of Elgin Avenue on Nov. 4. He was off-duty at the time.
The last Baltimore Police officer to die in the line of duty was Officer Craig Chandler, who in November 2014 crashed into a utility pole while pursuing a moped. In 2011, Officer William Torbit was fatally shot in a friendly fire incident while trying to break up a crowd outside a nightclub.
The last city officer fatally shot by a suspect in the line of duty was Officer Troy Chesley, who was off-duty but took action as a suspect attempted to rob him. Chesley’s son, Trayvon, was fatally shot earlier this year.
There have been 309 homicides in Baltimore in 2017, the third straight year of more than 300 killings.
Davis said police remained in Harlem Park trying to find “every bit of evidence” they could to help identify the shooter.
“This is going to be a long night for detectives and investigators,” he said.
Pugh said, “enough is enough.”
“Crime has to come to an end in the city,” she said. “This kind of violence cannot be tolerated.”
Baltimore State’s Attorney Marilyn J. Mosby said she knew Suiter from her work as a trial prosecutor. “I know firsthand his love and passion for serving the citizens of Baltimore and fighting crime. We have lost a true gem today,” she said in a statement Thursday.
Mosby called the shooting an “act of cowardice.” She said she wanted his family to know it would not go unpunished.
“I want them to rest assured that we will do our part to ensure that the perpetrator of this offense is brought to justice,” she said.
Police union president Gene Ryan and Lisa Robinson of the Vanguard Justice Society both asked for the community’s support for police officers to solve not only the shooting of the detective but other violent crimes in the city.
“Your help is necessary for the job that we do,” said Robinson, whose organization represents minority and female officers.
For hours after Suiter was shot Wednesday night, officers maintained a wide perimeter around the 900 block of Bennett Place, with officers taking cover around corners and the police helicopter, Foxtrot, swirling low. Police used the helicopter loudspeaker to tell people to go inside their homes, and a county tactical vehicle arrived later.
The location, just northwest of U.S. 40 and Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard is a particularly violent one. More than a dozen people have been shot or killed there in recent years.
Two people were shot near the corner, one of them fatally, on July 18, and three people were killed in a single incident last December. After a particularly violent spate in 2013, police barricaded the block and stationed an officer there around the clock.
The area was targeted for increased policing again this summer after the separate killings of two 15-year-old boys in August — including one right at the intersection of Bennett and Fremont.
Jeffrey Quick was shot to death on the corner on Aug. 22. Tyrese Davis was killed down the street earlier in the month.
After those killings, Maj. Sheree Briscoe, the Western District commander, said the area would be targeted with increased policing, but also with other city services — the approach Pugh has touted as a holistic way to address crime.
Baltimore Sun reporters Colin Campbell and Talia Richman contributed to this story.
A veteran Baltimore police detective died in the hospital today, one day after he was shot in the head by an unknown gunman, police said.
Homicide detective Sean Suiter, an 18-year veteran with the Baltimore Police, was conducting a follow-up to a homicide investigation around 5 p.m. Wednesday when he saw a man engaging in suspicious activity, police said.
Suiter approached the man and was shot in the head shortly after, police said.
The officer's partner was nearby and rushed over to render aid, they added.
The officer was immediately taken to the hospital and placed on life support, a hospital official said.
Suiter was in "very, very grave condition" Wednesday evening and was fighting "for his life," Baltimore Police Commissioner Kevin Davis said.
Suiter, 43, died around noon today, authorities said.
He was a married father of five.
Davis said today that Suiter was "a loved guy" who "loved being a cop.
"We have lost our best. When I was a new sgt in the WD, Det Suiter was my rock. He knew his post; colleagues & citizens respected him. He was the man u wanted investigating ur case & patrolling ur neighborhood. Quick with a smile & big of heart, he is dearly missed. RIP, my friend
As police hunt for his killer, authorities said evidence suggests the suspect may have been wounded.
Davis on Wednesday described the at-large suspect as "cold" and "callous."
"The individual responsible for this heinous crime will be found, charged, and prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law," Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan wrote on Twitter. "The Baltimore Police Department has our full support as they track down this violent criminal and bring him to justice."
"May God bless the brave men and women of the Baltimore Police and all law enforcement who serve and protect us every single day," he added.
The individual responsible for this heinous crime will be found, charged, and prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law. @BaltimorePolice has our full support as they track down this violent criminal and bring him to justice.
A $69,000 reward has been offered for information leading to the suspect's arrest.
These are our notes, for our research.. so the following is for admin use
Sean Suiter (October 6, 1974 – November 16, 2017) was a Baltimore City homicide detective who was found dead on November 16, 2017, with a shot in the head, a day before he was scheduled to testify in front of a federal grand jury against corrupt police connected to the Gun Trace Task Force scandal.
Career and background
The funeral for Sean Suiter. Governor Larry Hogan and Mayor Catherine Pugh are in attendance.
Suiter, 43, was an 18-year veteran of the Baltimore Police Department. Colleagues have said Suiter was an honest and beloved cop. A neighbor described Suiter saying, "He was pleasant; had a smile on his face all the time. He looks young ... looks vibrant and has a great spirit about him." Suiter was given a hero's funeral and praised for his work as an officer. Former Baltimore police Commissioner Kevin Davis said Suiter was not a target of the federal investigation around the Gun Trace Task Force. Suiter, however, was connected earlier in his career to several members of the corrupt Gun Trace Task Force including Sgt. Wayne Jenkins, Detective Maurice Ward, and Detective Momodu Gondo, who each later pled guilty in the racketeering case. Gondo, a disgraced former detective, also told a jury that Suiter was corrupt and that they stole money together.
Death
Suiter was investigating a triple homicide that occurred a year earlier, when the shooting occurred near 959 Bennett Place, in Baltimore, Maryland. He was shot in the head at close range with his own service weapon, which was recovered under his body. Blood was found on the inside of Suiter's shirt sleeve. Suiter's DNA was found inside the barrel of his own Glock. His death remains unsolved despite a $215,000 reward. Members of an outside review board released a 207-page report and concluded that Suiter was not murdered but took his own life because he was due to testify before a grand jury the next day and staged his death to appear like a murder so his family could receive line of duty benefits in case he lost his job as a result of incriminating details coming to light the grand jury testimony. The review board argued that Suiter was under duress about potentially being tied to corruption through the Gun Trace Task Force case and had "every incentive" to make his suicide appear to be a murder. The Baltimore Sun Editorial Board published a detailed article arguing why the theory that Suiter was murdered was implausible. They concluded by stating: "We have no idea who killed Sean Suiter. Each explanation is as implausible as the next."
City officials, however, have been split about the case. The medical examiner ruled that his death was a homicide. In 2020, Baltimore City made a decision to award $900,000 in workers’ compensation benefits to Suiter's widow Nicole Suiter. Nicole Suiter claimed that the fact that she received this workers' compensation payment is an implicit admission by the city that Suiter was indeed murdered and did not commit suicide, as "You do not win workers’ compensation cases unless you are injured, hurt or killed on the job."
Kevin Davis, the Baltimore Police Commissioner at the time, believed that Suiter was murdered. He asked the FBI to take over the investigation into Suiter’s death. However, the FBI declined, saying it had no evidence to suggest Suiter’s death was “directly connected” to the corruption probe or any other federal case.
The controversy around Suiter's death was once again brought to public attention with HBO's release of We Own This City, a portrayal of the Gun Trace Task Force scandal. The show depicted Suiter staging his suicide to appear like a murder. The show also insinuated that Suiter took his own life because he was afraid of being implicated by his own grand jury testimony. This aroused much anger from Suiter's friends and family who did not believe it was a suicide. David Simon published a rebuttal defending the show's depiction of the events.
Closing of Harlem Park neighborhood
After Suiter was found shot, police cordoned off and put the Harlem Park neighborhood on lockdown for six days. The area included 100 houses, a church and two stores. Described as akin to martial law,[26] officers positioned around the area's perimeter stopped residents, asking them for identification and preventing them from entering their own homes without identification. Members of the community later sued the city for the lockdown alleging that the city violated residents’ constitutional rights. The Baltimore Police Department paid $96,000 to settle the suit and issued a formal apology.
THE STRANGE CASE OF BALTIMORE POLICE DETECTIVE SEAN SUITER
3 June 2020
Jennifer Lewis
The night of Nov. 15, 2017, was cold and brisk on the streets of West Baltimore. Two detectives canvassed the 900 block of Bennett Place near Fremont Avenue, investigating a triple homicide that took place a few years prior. What appeared to be a typical night on the job turned into something much more harrowing as the evening sky grew dark. Two detectives were on the scene, but only one would live to see the next morning.
A 911 call was placed at 4:36 PM by Detective David Bomenka, a junior homicide detective of the Baltimore Police Department. His frantic call indicated that his partner on the case, Detective Sean Suiter, had been shot and needed immediate assistance. In less than 24 hours, Suiter was pronounced dead at the University of Maryland Medical Center — but the questions of that fateful afternoon continue to haunt the residents of Baltimore.
Suiter was an 18-year veteran homicide detective with a golden reputation amongst his peers. The Washington, D.C., native was a dedicated husband and devoted father who made it his life’s mission to better the streets of Baltimore. The shock of Suiter’s death stunned the city as details began to emerge surrounding the investigation.
The most shocking revelation of all?
Suiter died the day before he was scheduled to testify in a federal case, indicting eight officers of the Baltimore Gun Trace Task Force (GTTF). The task force was set in place to monitor the overwhelming amount of gun violence plaguing the streets of Baltimore. Instead, the involved officers used it to glorify their power by robbing citizens, wrongfully planting fake evidence, and time theft — clocking in when they weren’t working. Suiter was involved in a 2010 arrest made by members of the GTTF, who knowingly planted heroin on a suspect. Suiter was expected to testify his witness account, as he too was misled by the arresting officers during the encounter.
Suiter died one day before he was set to testify in a federal case indicting eight officers of the Baltimore Gun Trace Task Force (GTTF). Original illustration by Lenny Miller/Coffee or Die.
Suiter died the day before he was scheduled to testify in a federal case indicting eight officers of the Baltimore Gun Trace Task Force. Original illustration by Lenny Miller/Coffee or Die.
The Baltimore Police Commissioner was quick to rule out any foul play connecting the shooting to Suiter’s upcoming Grand Jury court date, but the city of Baltimore was not convinced.
Bomenka’s recollection of the day also placed doubt in the minds of those close to the case. He claimed that Suiter had spotted a suspicious person in a vacant lot off Bennett Place. Suiter instructed Bomenka to wait at the corner while he investigated the area. Within minutes, the sounds of gunfire filled the air, and Suiter was on the pavement with a gunshot wound to the head. There wasn’t a trace as to who attacked him.
Suiter’s gun, three shell casings, and the bullet responsible for ending his life were all recovered at the crime scene. The only description of the suspect described an African American male wearing a black jacket with a white stripe. There were no surveillance cameras in the alleyway, no witnesses, and no additional evidence. The case had no leads or persons of interest, leaving the family of Sean Suiter without answers as to who was behind this heinous and deliberate murder.
By early 2018, the case was at a standstill, with all tips investigated and all leads exhausted. In an effort to solve Suiter’s case, the Baltimore Police Department commissioned an independent review board (IRB). The board reviewed the accounts made on the night of his death, as well as the following investigation.
Their findings shocked Suiter’s family, the entire force, and the city of Baltimore as the report concluded that Suiter’s cause of death was not murder after all — it was suicide.
The IRB’s conclusion centered around Suiter’s upcoming court date, leveraging his testimony against the GTTF as the sole reason he would take his life. They also argued that the fact that he was shot with his own gun posed enough evidence for suicide as Suiter was well-trained in self-defense and was proficient in using and disabling his service weapon. Despite Bomenka’s statements indicating Suiter was approaching a suspicious person, there was no indication that anyone else was with Suiter in the vacant lot on Nov. 15, 2017.
This new finding was met with controversy. The medical examiner who conducted Suiter’s autopsy, as well as Baltimore’s city attorney, cast doubt on the report’s cause of death. The Suiter family also rejected the claim, as did their family attorney. They argued that not enough had been done during the investigation, including full testing on the weapon used, which contained DNA from Suiter and a partial strand from an unknown assailant.
Despite efforts made on behalf of Suiter’s family, friends, and attorney, the Baltimore Police Department accepted the IRB’s findings. In November 2019, just days before the second anniversary of his death, Suiter’s case was closed, and his cause of death was ruled a suicide.
Suiter’s family has continued to publicly criticize the handling of the case, believing his death to be the result of an inside job. As of May 2020, there have been no additional findings, coverage, or information to support their claim. All that remains is the memory of a hard-working detective, dedicated father, and devoted husband whose too-short life made an incredible impact on his community and on those who loved him.
Detective Sean Suiter's death while on duty on November 16, 2017 remains a matter of contention to this day.
The Baltimore Police Department detective died from a gunshot wound to the head the day before he was due to testify in court in the Gun Trace Task Force case, whose corruption scandal is explored in HBO's We Own This City.
Suiter was shot after he darted into a vacant lot in a neighborhood in West Baltimore. Police later claimed Suiter was shot with his own gun which was found underneath his body, per the Baltimore Sun, and his death was officially ruled a homicide by a medical examiner.
However, an Independent Review Board that later investigated Suiter's death labelled his death a suicide, something his family have vehemently refuted.
What Have People Said About Sean Suiter's Death?
Sean Suiter and Jamie Hector
In this combination image, Detective Sean Suiter (R) and actor Jamie Hector who plays Sean in the show "We Own This City." Sean Suiter, Baltimore detective was killed with his own gun just one day before he was set to testify before a federal grand jury in a case involving other officers, 2017.
In the We Own This City finale, which aired on Monday, May 30, Suiter's death is depicted in such a way that it does not give a definitive answer as to whether his passing was a homicide or a suicide.
This was something actor Jamie Hector, who portrays Suiter, appreciated about the HBO show, and he told Newsweek: "I feel like the show talks about exactly what it knows about, you know... this is what happened with Sean up until the point that we don't know what happened to Sean.
"Because we don't know if he took the money, because we don't know if this happened, everybody has their own opinion as to what happened. There was a study that was shown leaning in specific directions, right?
"For me personally, because, you know, there was not an eyewitness to the situation and he has a family that has to live with it as well, they did a great job of telling the story as to what happened to Sean."
Letting the Viewers Decide
The show's co-creator David Simon added: "I think for the sake of viewers we should just let people experience what the known moments are, what was witnessed, and let people decide as they will.
"If you're asking me individually... I think fundamentally, once you read the independent reviews, once you walk the ground, once you talk to the investigators, once you look at what was in that file, and what reasons they had for being out there, and what the physical evidence is, this man took his own life.
"It's not as satisfying, it's not as dramatic as the idea of him being assassinated because he was going to testify in front of the grand jury, or all the other narratives that you could possibly conjure, but it's the one that actually fits the evidence."
Baltimore Police Detective Died by Suicide, Report Says.
Darran Simon Janet DiGiacomo
By Darran Simon and Janet DiGiacomo, CNN
30 August 2018
A Baltimore police detective who officials initially said was fatally shot in a struggle with a suspect actually took his own life with his service weapon, according to an independent report released Tuesday.
Sean Suiter, 43, was shot in the head with his own gun November 15 in a vacant lot in West Baltimore, police said.
The fatal shooting occurred the day before Suiter, a homicide detective, was scheduled to testify before a federal grand jury in a police corruption case involving fellow officers. Then-Police Commissioner Kevin Davis said at the time that a brief call Suiter made on his police radio occurred during a struggle with a killer.
Detective Sean Suiter
Suiter’s death led to a manhunt, 12 search warrants, 123 interviews and a reward of more than $200,000 for the capture of the suspected gunman.
By early 2018, Baltimore police had exhausted all leads, and so commissioned an independent review of the homicide investigation, the circumstances surrounding the shooting and lessons from that day, according to the report.
The Independent Review Board said the lack of defensive wounds on Suiter’s knuckles, hands or arms, along with the presence of shell casings from Suiter’s Glock service weapon at the scene and the officer’s DNA inside the barrel of the gun and on its surface helped the board reach the conclusion that Suiter took his own life.
Suiter was right-handed, and the bullet entered from the right side of his head, the report said. Blood spatter was found inside his right sleeve cuff, it said.
“It is most implausible that anyone other than Detective Suiter could have fired the fatal shot with his weapon,” the report said.
Baltimore residents “should not fear that a ‘cop killer’ is on the loose,” the report said.
The report also criticized the statements of Davis, who initially said that Suiter approached a man “acting suspiciously” and then was killed. There was no evidence to support that conclusion, the report said.
“The commissioner repeatedly shared unverified and ultimately inaccurate information with the public, despite the emergence of forensic and other evidence suggesting that Suiter took his own life,” it said.
Baltimore Mayor Catherine Pugh ousted Davis in January, saying the city wasn’t reducing violence fast enough.
Davis could not be reached for comment Tuesday and Wednesday.
What the report found
The seven-member board, which includes former law enforcement members, reviewed material including witness videos, radio and 911 transmissions and footage from a neighborhood camera on the day of the shooting.
Neither Paul Siegrist, an attorney for Suiter’s widow, nor the detective’s union, the Fraternal Order of Police, could be reached for comment Tuesday.
Gary Tuggle, Baltimore’s interim police commissioner who took over in May, said police will integrate the independent board’s recommendations into the department’s reform efforts, and expressed his condolences to Suiter’s family.
“My hope is that Detective Suiter’s family will see some clarity as a result of this report as they continue to mourn,” Tuggle said.
Tuggle said “the case remains an open investigation within the police department.” The medical examiner’s office, which has a copy of the report “would be the entity to make any determination with respect to changing [the] manner of death, not the police department,” Tuggle said.
Bruce Goldfarb, a spokesman for the medical examiner’s office said Wednesday: “We don’t discuss cases that are under investigation.”
A month before Suiter’s death, the report said, a detective with the department’s now defunct Gun Trace Task Force pleaded guilty to felony charges in a corruption probe and implicated Suiter in robberies in 2008 when they were both officers. That detective said Suiter “knowingly planted heroin in a suspect’s car to justify a high-speed police chase” that led to an accident killing an elderly driver, the report said.
Suiter declined to be interviewed by the FBI in the corruption investigation and was served a grand jury subpoena, the report said. “Suiter was reported to have asked the FBI agents ‘(W)ill I lose my job?’ ” the report said.
Suiter, who was considered a subject of the investigation, was granted limited immunity for all potential criminal acts arising from that incident, the report said.
These undated photos provided by the Baltimore Police Department show, from left, Daniel Hersl, Evodio Hendrix, Jemell Rayam, Marcus Taylor, Maurice Ward, Momodu Gando and Wayne Jenkins, the seven police officers who are facing charges of robbery, extortion and overtime fraud, and are accused of stealing money and drugs from victims, some of whom had not committed crimes.
7 Baltimore officers accused of abusing power, robbing citizens
The day before the shooting, Suiter requested David Bomenka, a “very junior” detective, accompany him to a West Baltimore neighborhood to find a potential witness, known only as “Mary,” in a triple homicide Suiter investigated nearly a year earlier, the report said.
The two detectives returned to the neighborhood the next day and began searching for a suspicious person Suiter said he had seen, the report said.
During the search, Suiter’s attorney called him twice because they were scheduled to meet later that day. But Suiter did not pick up.
At one point during the search, Suiter made a waving gesture to Bomenka, unholstered his weapon and ran toward a vacant lot, out of view of surveillance cameras and Bomenka, the report said.
Bomenka said he heard Suiter yell, “Stop! Stop! Stop! Police!” He also heard gunshots as he approached Suiter, the report said. During this time, Suiter’s radio transmitted an “unintelligible sound,” then a loud noise and then went dead, the report said.
Bomenka, who was roughly 60 feet behind Suiter when he went into the lot, didn’t see a shooter but saw “gun smoke hovering close to the ground where Suiter was located,” it said.
The actions that led to Suiter’s death occurred in “less than nine seconds,” according to the report.
“Video from a neighbor’s video camera and testimony of two witnesses establish that a suspect would have had a couple of seconds at most to disarm Suiter, shoot him with his own weapon, erase any trace of his presence, and exit the vacant lot without being seen or heard,” the report said.
Suiter was found face down, holding his radio in his left hand with his gun underneath him, the report said. His was the only DNA recovered from his gun, it said.
Blood splatter found inside Suiter’s right sleeve meant it must have been exposed to where the bullet entered his skull at the moment he was shot, the report said.
The 18-year officer, a married father of five children, was pronounced dead the next day.
In addition to determining Suiter was not killed by an unknown suspect, the report also put to rest another theory, saying Suiter “was not killed by his partner Detective Bomenka.”
“Detective Sean Suiter spent the last hour of his life ignoring his attorney’s calls and texts,” the report said.
Instead, he drove around the neighborhood “ostensibly looking for a mysterious ‘Mary’ and perhaps another mystery suspect,” the report said.
“He had a meeting at 5 p.m. to prepare to face his difficult choice before the grand jury” – admit guilt and lose his job, or deny wrongdoing and possibly face charges, the report said. “Time was running out. Suiter’s futile searches may have signaled a quiet desperation before a final, tragic decision.”
Name
Description
End of Watch
16 November 2017
City, St.
Bennett Place and N. Fremont Avenue
Panel Number
N/A
Cause of Death
Gunfire
Weapon
- Handgun
District Worked
Homicide
POLICE INFORMATION
Copies of: Your Baltimore Police Department Class Photo, Pictures of our Officers, Vehicles, Equipment, Newspaper Articles relating to our department and or officers, Old Departmental Newsletters, Lookouts, Wanted Posters, and or Brochures. Information on Deceased Officers and anything that may help Preserve the History and Proud Traditions of this agency. Please contact Retired Detective Kenny Driscoll.
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1927- 7 Dec 1927 - Patrolman Harry Sullivan, 37 years old, of Central District Police died today (7 Dec 1927) at his home 514 Hurleys Lane as a result of an attack of indigestion and heart trouble. Sullivan was feeling ill when he went off duty Tuesday evening and reported sick last night. He had been on the police force since 14 July 1921
More Details
Name
Description
End of Watch
7 Dec 1927
City, St.
514 Hurleys Lane
Panel Number
N/A
Cause of Death
Heart Attack
District Worked
Central
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Yesterday afternoon, a shotgun blast fired through a wooden door at a Northeast Baltimore home struck a veteran city police lieutenant who was assisting his fellow officers on a routine call and killed him. Lt. Owen E. Sweeney, Jr., 47, who was one month shy of his 29th anniversary with the department, was pronounced dead at 4:04 p.m. after more than three hours of surgery at the Maryland Shock Trauma Center. His wife and two sons have survived him. Friends say Lt. Sweeney was counting the days to retirement, and had just bought a 28 foot cabin cruiser that was to be delivered next week. Last night, police charged Baron Michael Cherry, 41, of the 5900 Block of Bertram Avenue with first degree murder and using a deadly weapon in the commission of a felony… Officers who knew the lieutenant – the first city officer killed in the line of duty in four years—praised their supervisor for favoring street work over paperwork. On Tuesday, he was the first officer to confront a man holding an Uzi semiautomatic weapon during a robbery attempt at the Northwood Shopping Center. It wasn’t beneath him, “because he wore a gold badge, to do police work with the rest of us,” said Officer John D. Platt, a friend and 14-year veteran. Yesterday, Lt. Sweeney was doing paperwork in his office when he heard a call on the radio summoning officers to a house on Bertram Avenue in Hamilton. He quickly joined his officers at the house. Lt. Sweeney tried to talk to the man behind a closed wooden door to an apartment at the top of a second-floor stairwell. “We’re here to help you, we’re not here to hurt you,” Lt. Sweeney said, according to Platt, who was standing next to him. The officers and Lt. Sweeney turned and started to walk downstairs when the shotgun blast blew away part of the door. Lt. Sweeney, struck in the lower left back, collapsed into Officer Platt’s arms. The officers pulled him down the stairs and outside. Moments later, Platt said, Cherry walked out of the room, unarmed and with his hands in the air, and apologized. He struggled with the police as they placed him in custody.
'It's my fault, I'm sorry,' suspect's weeping wife says of officer's death No guns in apartment, she told police before lieutenant was killed
She forgot about shotgun Mentally disturbed man held without bail in lieutenant's death
May 09, 1997 |By Peter Hermann | Peter Hermann,SUN STAFF Sun staff writers Marilyn McCraven and Thomas W. Waldron contributed to this article. One of the first questions police officers asked Denise Cherry when they came to help her distraught husband was if there were any guns inside the couple's Hamilton apartment. No, she said emphatically. But she forgot about the 16-gauge shotgun tucked in the back of the bedroom closet -- a gift of more than a decade ago.
Police said Baron Michael Cherry, a 41-year-old mentally disturbed man who frustrated his wife by refusing to take his medication, used the bolt-action shotgun to fatally shoot a veteran police lieutenant in the back on Wednesday afternoon. "It's my fault, I'm sorry," the suspect's wife cried out during an emotional interview yesterday in which she sobbed and offered prayers for the family of slain Lt. Owen E. Sweeney Jr. "I would never have imagined that that weapon was accessible," Mrs. Cherry said, struggling to talk about her husband's good side without offending the victim's family. "When the officers asked if there were any weapons or guns inside, I said no." Police commanders said they would have handled the situation much differently had they known about the gun, calling for tactical officers to negotiate instead of standing outside the apartment door.
Mrs. Cherry, unable to get her husband committed to psychiatric care, had called the police, hoping they could do what doctors could not. Officers were trying to coax Cherry out when he allegedly answered with profanity and a shotgun blast that splintered a closed wooden door and hit Sweeney in the lower back. Relatives of the slain officer were too distraught to talk yesterday, and even asked that police officers refrain from visiting their home in Harford County. Flags in Baltimore were ordered flown at half-staff, and a moment of silence was observed in the State House.
More than a thousand officers are expected to attend the funeral Monday at St. Margaret Roman Catholic Church in Bel Air to pay tribute to Sweeney, a 28-year veteran officer who leapt at every chance to escape his desk and hit the streets. A motorcade route from the church to the interment site at Dulaney Valley Memorial Gardens has not yet been set. The procession for slain State Trooper Ted Wolf in 1990 stretched 16 miles along the Baltimore Beltway and Interstate 83. Police chaplains went to station houses yesterday and talked to shaken officers, who were allowed to take the day off if they needed time to recover. Mayor Kurt L. Schmoke called Sweeney "an outstanding officer" and said "he certainly will be missed by all of us in this community."
Sweeney is survived by his wife, Elaine D. Sweeney, 47; and two sons, Owen E. Sweeney III, 25, and Frank P. Sweeney, 22. While the lieutenant's family was making funeral arrangements yesterday, District Judge Askew W. Gatewood Jr. ordered Cherry held without bail, scheduled a psychiatric evaluation, and placed the suspect under a suicide watch. The suspect said, "No, sir," when the judged asked if had any comment. Cherry, charged with first-degree murder, could face the death penalty if convicted. But Schmoke said yesterday it will be "a tough call for the prosecutor" because of the suspect's questionable mental state.
Mrs. Cherry, 36, said yesterday that her husband of 13 years suffered a breakdown seven years ago. "He was hearing voices, and [said] there were white worms crawling on his head." Doctors at Johns Hopkins Hospital had diagnosed him as a paranoid-schizophrenic. Sitting at the kitchen table inside her second-floor apartment in the 5900 block of Bertram Ave. in Northeast Baltimore, Mrs. Cherry tried to talk about the good times with her husband, about how they met at a local bar. She was a customer, and he played the drums in a band called After Dark. Her table was strewn with snapshots of him taken before his breakdown: dressed casually in an open-collar shirt and vest at their wedding; standing at a vacation Bible school with two young nieces; and with his pet Shih Tzu dog, named Ollie.
But the last seven years, in which her husband became a virtual recluse, were constantly on her mind. She said he ventured outside only to walk his dog and went into profanity-laced tirades at television game-show hosts. Mrs. Cherry tried to recall the good times but repeatedly returned to the troubled present. "The first six years were wonderful," she said calmly one moment, only to break out into tears and run from the room the next. Properly medicated, Cherry -- a 1974 graduate of Eastern Vocational-Technical High School in Essex, scrubbed kitchen floors and cooked dinner; without his pills, he became afraid. He ran around the house, locking doors, and calling people whores. "His paranoia is people, and people are everywhere," Mrs. Cherry said. "He thought people were aliens."
Mrs. Cherry said her husband started refusing his medication three weeks ago because one of the two drugs prescribed made him tired. She said she repeatedly took him to the Harford-Belair Community Mental Health Center, where doctors wanted him to take injections. Cherry refused, and his wife said doctors at the center would not admit him to a hospital. Finally, minutes after noon on Wednesday, with her husband growing increasingly agitated, she picked up the phone and dialed 311—the city's non-emergency phone number. Five officers came to the house and "repeatedly asked Mrs. Cherry if her husband had access to a weapon inside the apartment, and she repeatedly told them no," said Agent Robert W. Weinhold Jr., a police spokesman.
Back at the Northeastern District station, Sweeney was at his desk, engulfed in paperwork, listening to the action unfold on his police radio. It wasn't going well, and "he wanted to make sure it was properly supervised," said his colleague, Lt. Carl Gutberlet. Police said Sweeney also asked Mrs. Cherry if there were any guns inside the apartment, and confident of her negative response, she stood in front of the door and tried to coax the man outside. "They were trying to end this peacefully," said Officer Gary McLhinney, the police union president.
Mrs. Cherry, who was standing on the lawn on the left side of her house, said her husband walked over to a window and made an obscene gesture to an officer, who she said laughed. About two minutes later, she heard her husband scream a profanity, which was followed by a shotgun blast and the frantic cries, "Officer down." She said the shotgun had been a gift, and she never saw her husband take it out. She kept the shells in another room, mixed in with knicknacks. There was little evidence yesterday of the violence that erupted at the house a day before. The police took the splintered door away as evidence, and the blood on the side of the house was scrubbed away. A plaque still hung yesterday above the front door, through which the wounded Sweeney was carried out. It says: "Lord, help me hang in there."
Funeral plans
The funeral service for Lt. Owen E. Sweeney Jr. is scheduled for 10 a.m. Monday at St. Margaret Roman Catholic Church at 141 Hickory Ave. in Bel Air. The viewing is at Schimunek Funeral Home at 610 W. McPhail Road in Bel Air Saturday and Sunday from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. and from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. The interment will be at Dulaney Valley Memorial Gardens.
Pub Date: 5/09/97
More Details
Name
Description
End of Watch
7 May, 1997
City, St.
5900 Block of Bertram Avenue
Panel Number
34-E: 20
Cause of Death
Gunfire
District Worked
Northeastern
POLICE INFORMATION
Copies of: Your Baltimore Police Department Class Photo, Pictures of our Officers, Vehicles, Equipment, Newspaper Articles relating to our department and/or officers, Old Departmental Newsletters, Lookouts, Wanted Posters, and/or Brochures. Information on deceased officers and anything that may help preserve the history and proud traditions of this agency. Please contact retired detective Kenny Driscoll.
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NOTICE
How to Dispose of Old Police Items
Please contact Det. Ret. Kenny Driscoll if you have any pictures of you or your family members and wish them remembered here on this tribute site to honor the fine men and women who have served with honor and distinction at the Baltimore Police Department.
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Patrolman John EDWARD SWIFT - Was involved in an altercation during his shift, injured so badly he had to be taken home (carried by his fellow officers) he never made back to work, he died from injuries to his spleen, some said it was a heart attack, in either case it came about as a result of the fight he had that night. All I have is it happened in 1923
More Details
Name
Description
End of Watch
1923
City, St.
Baltimore, Md
Panel Number
N/A
Cause of Death
Fight
District Worked
Western
POLICE INFORMATION
Copies of: Your Baltimore Police Department Class Photo, Pictures of our Officers, Vehicles, Equipment, Newspaper Articles relating to our department and or officers, Old Departmental Newsletters, Lookouts, Wanted Posters, and or Brochures. Information on Deceased Officers and anything that may help Preserve the History and Proud Traditions of this agency. Please contact Retired Detective Kenny Driscoll.
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
NOTICE
How to Dispose of Old Police Items
Please contact Det. Ret. Kenny Driscoll if you have any pictures of you or your family members and wish them remembered here on this tribute site to Honor the fine men and women who have served with Honor and Distinction at the Baltimore Police Department.
Anyone with information, photographs, memorabilia, or other "Baltimore City Police" items can contact Ret. Det. Kenny Driscoll at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. follow us on Twitter @BaltoPoliceHist or like us on Facebook or mail pics to 8138 Dundalk Ave. Baltimore Md. 21222
Suddenly, on April 17, 2003, LT. WALTER A. TAYLOR Jr., Baltimore City Police Dept.; beloved husband of Elizabeth E. (Betsy) Taylor; devoted father of Heather Lynn Everhart (nee Taylor) and her husband Steve; loving grandfather of Brandon Corey and Jacob Taylor; dear son-in-law of Lucille Rogers. Also survived by four sisters. Friends are invited to call at the family owned and operated McCULLY-POLYNIAK FUNERAL HOME, P.A., 3204 Mountain Road (Pasadena) on Monday from 2 to 9 P.M. Funeral Services will be celebrated on Tuesday 12 noon at the Funeral Home. Interment Dulaney Valley Memorial Gardens. Memorials in his name to the American Heart Association, 7240 Parkway Drive, Suite 360, Hanover, MD 21076, will be appreciated.
More Details
Name
Description
End of Watch
17 April 2003
City, St.
Baltimore, Md
Panel Number
N/A
Cause of Death
Heart Attack
Donations
Donations help with web hosting, stamps and materials and the cost of keeping the website online. Thank you so much for helping BCPH.
POLICE INFORMATION
Copies of: Your Baltimore Police Department Class Photo, Pictures of our Officers, Vehicles, Equipment, Newspaper Articles relating to our department and or officers, Old Departmental Newsletters, Lookouts, Wanted Posters, and or Brochures. Information on Deceased Officers and anything that may help Preserve the History and Proud Traditions of this agency. Please contact Retired Detective Kenny Driscoll.
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
NOTICE
How to Dispose of Old Police Items
Please contact Det. Ret. Kenny Driscoll if you have any pictures of you or your family members and wish them remembered here on this tribute site to Honor the fine men and women who have served with Honor and Distinction at the Baltimore Police Department. Anyone with information, photographs, memorabilia, or other "Baltimore City Police" items can contact Ret. Det. Kenny Driscoll at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. follow us on Twitter @BaltoPoliceHist or like us on Facebook or mail pics to 8138 Dundalk Ave. Baltimore Md. 21222
These officers are legends with names that everyone should be familiar with; they either put forward something that resulted in long-lasting improvements or stood out for a specific act or actions during their careers with the Baltimore Police Department. Members of our department nominated all of them. If you have someone to nominate, send us their name, years of active service, assignment(s), and why you believe they should be added to this list.
To see a copy of the Order Form click the above picture or click HERE. You can also write Skip Panowitz direct at the following email - Autocollectibles@verizon.net A portion of your purchase will go toward funding this site, research for the museum, and toward the preservation of Baltimore Police Department's history. CODE
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