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Taylor police officers
prepare to take measurements, Friday July 23, 2010, after an
officer was killed in an early morning shooting in Taylor,
Mich., a Detroit suburb. (AP Photo/The Detroit News, Steve
Perez) |
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Suburban
Detroit
police
officer
shot and
killed
By
Nicquel
Terry
and Mike
Householder
Associated
Press
Writers
TAYLOR,
MI - A
man once
named
officer
of the
year by
the
Police
Officers
Association
of
Michigan
was
fatally
shot
Friday
while
responding
to a
burglary
call,
officials
said.
Cpl.
Matthew
Edwards,
31, is
the
first
officer
killed
in the
line of
duty in
the
history
of the
Taylor
police
department
in
suburban
Detroit.
"Officer
Edwards
made the
ultimate
sacrifice
—
something
we
sometimes
take for
granted
as we
put on
our
uniforms
every
day,"
Taylor
police
Cmdr.
Dan
Crowell
said.
"As law
enforcement
officers,
we all
expect
to go
home at
night to
our
families."
Edwards
was
married
with two
children
and
joined
the
Taylor
police
in
January
2005.
Crowell
said
Edwards
and
another
officer
went to
an
apartment
complex
around 6
a.m.
after
receiving
a call
that
someone
was
trying
to enter
one of
the
units
through
a
window.
Edwards
and his
partner
came
across a
man
matching
the
suspect's
description
in the
parking
lot,
Crowell
said.
The
second
officer
headed
toward
the site
of the
alleged
breaking-and-entering,
while
Edwards
talked
to the
suspect.
Crowell
said the
suspect
— a
36-year-old
Westland
man with
"quite a
lengthy
criminal
history"
— pulled
out a
gun and
shot
Edwards,
who was
pronounced
dead at
a
hospital.
Edwards'
partner
shot the
suspect,
who was
taken to
the
hospital
and had
surgery.
Crowell
said
although
Edwards
and his
partner
were
responding
to a
report
of a
break-in,
it more
likely
was a
domestic
disturbance
at the
apartment
complex.
Resident
Arthur
White,
38, said
the
Coppertree
complex
is in a
rough
area
where
drugs
and
teenage
delinquency
are
common.
"A lot
of
activity
here,"
he said.
"Drugs.
Teenagers
walking
around."
White
said a
woman
was
fatally
shot two
days
after he
moved
into
Coppertree
several
years
ago.
In 2007,
a woman
was
killed
during a
dispute
involving
her son
and
others.
At the
time,
police
said she
tried to
intervene
and two
people
shot in
her
direction.
On
Friday,
Coppertree
residents
were met
by
yellow
police
tape
affixed
to trees
throughout
the
complex.
Investigators
went
door-to-door
in the
immediate
area to
talk to
residents.
At
Taylor
police
headquarters,
Lt. John
Blair
said it
had been
"a rough
day" as
people
dealt
with
losing a
comrade
in the
line of
duty.
"We've
escaped
it to
this
point,"
he said.
While
Crowell
was
reading
a
prepared
statement
to
reporters,
he
uttered
Edwards'
name for
the
first
time,
then
took a
long
pause to
compose
himself
before
continuing.
"It's a
very sad
day for
the
Taylor
police
department,"
he said.
Associated
Press
Writer
David
Aguilar
in
Detroit
contributed
to this
report.
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