Slain San Diego Police Officer Identified

July 30, 2016
A traffic stop late Thursday night led to a shooting that killed Officer Jonathan DeGuzman and wounded Officer Wade Irwin and a suspect.

- The slain officer has been identified as Jonathan DeGuzman, 43, a 16-year-veteran who was married with two children.

The wounded officer was DeGuzman's partner, Wade Irwin, 32, who has been on the force for nine years. In a news conference at San Diego police headquarters, Chief Shelley Zimmerman said he is unconcious, but is expected to survive.

One suspect in the shooting was shot and seriously wounded. He has not been identified.

Meanwhile, San Diego police SWAT officers are storming a house, just half a mile from the shooting, after hours surrounding the house and calling for someone inside named "Marcus" to surrender.

A police officer used a bullhorn to urge a man named Marcus to come out of a house on Epsilon Street just west of 41st Street.

The officer said, "We're not going anywhere. It has been a really long night. I'm worried about you. I haven't heard from you for a while.

"I need to hear from you. You need to talk to me. Your sister ... is really scared. What should I tell her? It's not fair to have your sister so worried about you."

Officers fired repeated gas bombs into the home, which had an armored SWAT vehicle in the driveway.

A prisoner could be seen in the back of a patrol car.

Police said a remotely controlled robot searched the house and found no one inside, but could not open a closet.

A few moments later, the officer could be heard on the bullhorn saying, "Hey Marcus. We hear you coughing in there. Come on out."

The standoff has been continuing for several hours.

Original Story A traffic stop late Thursday night led to a shooting that killed a San Diego police officer and wounded a second officer and a suspect in Southcrest, where police searched for hours for other possible suspects.

The names and service history of the male officers, both part of the department's gang suppression unit, were not released.

The slain officer suffered multiple gunshot wounds and died at a hospital despite life-saving efforts, San Diego Police Chief Shelley Zimmerman said early Friday. The wounded officer underwent surgery early Friday and was expected to survive.

The male suspect, who had been shot, was being treated at a hospital, Zimmerman said. His name was not released.

Police offered few details about how the shooting unfolded.

The two officers had pulled over a vehicle about 11 p.m. somewhere in the area of Acacia Grove Way and 38th Street. Immediately after, they called for emergency cover.

Other officers were in the area and arrived swiftly. They found the two officers suffering from gunshot wounds to the upper torso. The critically injured officer was rushed to a hospital in a police vehicle.

"Despite heroic efforts by officers on scene and heroic efforts by doctors to save his life, I'm heartbroken to report they were unable to save him, and he is deceased," Zimmerman said outside Scripps Mercy Hospital, where the mood was tense and somber.

Outside the main entrance, some officers could be seen hugging one another. Others stood stoically, guarding the hospital doors. Zimmerman escorted several people into the hospital.

Zimmerman later said she had gone to the home of the slain officer and notified his wife, two children and extended family members who were at the home.

"It is extremely difficult, but something you have to do," Zimmerman said, joined by other department leaders. "There's nothing that prepares you to do that."

The wife of the critically injured officer was beside him at UC San Diego Medical Center as he underwent surgery, Zimmerman said.

Because other family members of the two officers had not yet been notified, their names were not released to the public.

There was no update on the condition of the suspect, who was taken into custody about 11:30 p.m. in a ravine near South 38th and Alpha streets. Officers had found a blood trail leading toward him.

Police, including officers from many other agencies, swarmed the area and, with guns drawn, searched for any other possible suspects with the aid of police dogs, a helicopter and SWAT team members. They focused for hours on the Chollas Creek open area just south of Acacia Grove. Residents were asked to stay indoors and streets were cordoned off for several blocks in all directions.

Shortly before sunrise, no other suspects had been found.

Many officers from the other police agencies were released from their posts by 4 a.m. and some streets reopened after that.

The incident comes as police in Southern California and throughout the country are on high alert following the killing of officers in Dallas and Baton Rouge, La., earlier this month.

The National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund on Wednesday issued a report revealing that 67 law enforcement officers have been killed in the line of duty this year through July 20 --an eight percent increase over the same period last year, when 62 officers were killed.

Other figures on the Officer Down Memorial Page website showed that 19 officers had been slain nationwide in July, through Monday.

The last two San Diego police officers slain in the line of duty were Christopher Wilson and Jeremy Henwood.

Wilson, 50, a 17-year police veteran, was shot and killed on Oct. 27, 2010, as he and other officers tried to take a parolee into custody at a South Meadowbrook Drive apartment in the Skyline neighborhood.

Police, probation officers and U.S. marshals wanted to talk to Alex Charfauros in hopes he could lead them to a fugitive named Holim Lee. Charfauros was removed from an apartment, then officers kicked in a bedroom door. They were met with a barrage of gunfire, with a round hitting Wilson in the head. He died early the next morning.

Inside the bedroom, Lee and girlfriend Lucky Xayasene died of self-inflicted gunshot wounds. Lee is believed to have killed Wilson.

Melissa Ortiz and Patrick Luangrath also were holed up inside a closet in the bedroom.

They surrendered to police after a SWAT standoff that lasted several hours. Charfaurous, Ortiz and Luangrath were all sent to prison in connection with the fatal shooting.

Henwood, 36, a four-year police veteran, was killed in an ambush-style shooting on Aug. 6, 2011, as he was patrolling through City Heights. The gunman, who had just shot a man in Santee 30 minutes earlier, drove alongside Henwood's car, aimed a shotgun at the officer's head and opened fire.

The shooter, Dejon White, was killed by other officers a short time later.

Only moments before the shooting, Henwood had stopped at a Fairmount Avenue McDonald's and took time to buy cookies for a 13-year-old boy who didn't have enough money for the treat. Next week will mark the fifth anniversary of the officer's slaying.

In a more recent, non-fatal assault, Officer Tim Bell, 29, survived being shot four times on Oct. 24, 2013, by a wanted felon he chased into a storm drain in City Heights. Bell's bullet-proof vest saved his life as he took rounds to the chest, arm and leg. At the time of the shooting, Bell had been on the department for 5 1/2 years.

Ignacio Canela, an ex-convict who had led officers in a pursuit before running into the storm drain beneath state Route 15, was sentenced in June to 54 years to life in prison for premeditated attempted murder.

Copyright 2016 - The San Diego Union-Tribune

Tribune News Service

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