Walmart will be hiring dozens of new workers for an expanded …
Posted: 04/06/2012
AUSTIN, Texas - A police officer was shot and killed early Friday at a Walmart in Central Texas, and a suspect is in custody, police said.
Austin Police Chief Art Acevedo said the officer was shot in the neck and died at the scene.
The officer was responding to a call about a drunk man inside the store around 2:30 a.m., Acevedo said. The suspect attacked the officer as soon as he arrived at the store and the officer didn't have a chance to even pull out his own weapon.
"The suspect produced a semi-automatic pistol and shot the officer at point blank range," Acevedo said. The wounded officer was able to call for help using his police radio, he added.
The police chief declined to identify the officer or suspect, but he said the deceased man had two daughters.
"This was a routine call," Acevedo said. "What makes our job deadly is that there is no routine call."
Two Walmart employees tackled and held the suspect and locked down the store until another police officer arrived to arrest him. Acevedo praised their actions, saying they did all they were supposed to do. He said store video captured the entire incident.
"I am heartened that two brave souls took action. They tackled the suspect when they saw the officer was shot unprovoked," Acevedo said. Once the suspect was handcuffed, another officer gave the victim CPR and medics tried to revive him, but they pronounced the officer dead at 2:44 a.m.
Wal-Mart Stores Inc. spokeswoman Dianna Gee expressed sympathy for the officer's family and colleagues, and said the Bentonville, Ark.-based retailer is proud of staff at the store.
"The associates displayed courage under these extreme circumstances," Gee said. She declined to provide more details about the shooting, referring questions to the police.
Austin city manager Chris Ott lamented the officer's death.
"It is a sad day for the city of Austin to lose a member of our family," Ott said.
Pedro Garcia and his roommate, Sapna Sharma, who live in the suburb of Pflugerville, told the Austin American-Statesman they were grocery shopping at the back of the store when they heard gunfire.
"I felt like something fell really hard," Sharma said.
They said an employee told them there had been a shooting and that more than a dozen officers swarmed into the store.
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
John Matarese has news of another big photo studio closing its …
A man in a large red sedan hit two cars in the parking lot of a…
An 75-year-old woman’s Hoveround wheelchair was stolen at the …
A dispute over a coupon ended with a Walmart shopper pulling a …
National Headlines
NewsChannel5 reporter Stephanie Ramirez is in Moore, Oklahoma, where 24 died from an EF-5 tornado on Monday.
Two days after an EF-5 tornado tore through the town of Moore, Okla., residents are being allowed to return to where their homes once stood.