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  • 23
    Feb
    2012
    11:26am, EST

    Suspect in slaying of Wash. state trooper kills self

    AP Photo/The News Tribune, Dean J. Koepfler

    Investigators examine the area around the patrol car at the scene near Gorst, Wash., where a Washington state trooper was shot and killed during a traffic stop Thursday.

    By NBC News, msnbc.com staff and news services

    Updated at 5:11 p.m. ET: GORST, Wash. – A suspect in the shooting death of a Washington state trooper has died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound.

    The Kitsap County Sheriff's Office confirmed Thursday afternoon that the man had passed away after being taken to Tacoma General Hospital.


    AP

    Trooper Tony Radulescu, 44.

    The suspect was 28-year-old Joshua Jearl Blake, an ex-con with a history of drugs, assaulting the mother of one of his children, and kicking out the window of a police car. Blake was the registered owner of a pickup that Trooper Tony Radulescu pulled over just before he was shot to death early Thursday.

    Investigators tracked Blake to a home near Port Orchard, where he shot himself as a SWAT team closed in.

    “It’s a bad day," Washington State Patrol Chief John Batiste told KING5.com. "It’s a terrible thing to receive a phone call that lets you know that one of your people has been injured in the line of duty. To have that compounded by the loss of that trooper. It’s a bad day.”

    Radulescu, 44, had stopped the driver of a dark green Ford F-350 around 1 a.m. Thursday near Port Orchard, about 20 miles west of Seattle across the Puget Sound, and radioed the location and license plate number, according to Trooper Russ Winger.

    When the trooper didn't respond to status checks, a Kitsap County sheriff's deputy went to the scene and found the wounded trooper outside his patrol car.

    "He got here at 1:14 a.m., four minutes later, to find the injured trooper next to his vehicle," Trooper Ken Dickinson told KING5.com. "He immediately called for medical help."

    He was taken to St. Joseph Medical Center in Tacoma, where he was declared dead.

    Three hours later, officers found the truck abandoned on a county road near Port Orchard, about two miles from the shooting scene.

    "It was down a long country driveway, so it was kind of obvious it was ditched back there," Winger told KING5.com. "You had to drive down there with some intent -- not a real reason to go down there."

    Troopers, deputies and other officers searched the area for the driver using dogs and questioning people. Dogs failed to pick up a track, Winger said.

    Officers from multiple law enforcement agencies in the region had canvassed the area, knocking on doors to do welfare checks at homes, according to KING5.com.  They urged residents to stay inside and call 911 if they saw anything suspicious. 
     
    'We're hurting'
    The slain trooper was a well-respected veteran who worked out of the Bremerton station. He was also a military veteran with a son who is a soldier.

    "We're all hurting, I'm hurting," Batiste told The Seattle Times. "He was a father and peer to many of us who was dearly loved. He served this country in the military and was with this organization for about 16 years."

    "It's difficult,” Winger told KING5.com. “He was a personal friend of mine, a personal co-worker, he worked closely with me.... I've known this person for 14-15 years. I've been too busy to really think about the tragedy of it right now. It's going to sink in later."

    Dozens of patrol cars with lights flashing escorted an aid car carrying the trooper's body about 6:30 a.m. Thursday from the hospital to the Pierce County medical examiner's office.

    The last Washington State Patrol trooper killed on duty was James Saunders, 31, who was shot in 1999 during a traffic stop in Pasco. Nicolas S. Vasquez pleaded guilty to aggravated murder and was sentenced to life in prison without parole.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    16 comments

    God Bless that Trooper and his family.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: killer, slain, cop, trooper, wash, manhunt
  • 11
    Jan
    2012
    11:14am, EST

    Lockdown on Army base lifted; equipment still missing

    By NBC News and news services

    JOINT BASE LEWIS-MCCHORD, Wash. – A company of soldiers has been released from lockdown at Joint Base Lewis-McChord in Washington as criminal investigators probe the theft of $600,000 worth of weapons accessories.

    About 100 soldiers from the 4th Stryker Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division were allowed to return home Tuesday evening after being restricted to their battalion headquarters since Jan. 4.

    Sources told KING5 the equipment went missing sometime between Christmas and New Year's. Someone realized a lock had been changed in the weapons room, and no one had a key to it.

    Read original story on KING5.com

    After breaking through the lock, JBLM officials tallied about $600,000 worth of missing weapon sights, night vision devices, optics, rifle scopes and other items.

    NBC sources said they do not believe the equipment was stolen for espionage, but rather to sell for profit.

    Brigade commander Col. Michael Getchell told The Associated Press the restrictions "have been an integral part of the investigation."

    An Associated Press phone message to the investigating office was not immediately returned.

    Lockdowns are a common military practice in cases like these, JBLM spokesman Major Chris Ophardt told NWCN.com.

    In March 2001, about 150 soldiers faced a similar situation over a one pair of missing night vision goggles, he said.

    KING5 and The AP contributed to this report.

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    48 comments

    Who cares. The military is no longer an honorable profession. Sexual deviancy and moral depravity is now condoned, promoted, and defended by the United States. God help us all.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: army, base, soldiers, theft, weapons, lockdown, wash, lew-mcchord

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