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CAL
June 29th, 2010, 10:19 AM
Link (http://www.cnn.com/2010/CRIME/06/29/florida.police.shot/index.html?hpt=T1)


(CNN) -- A second Tampa, Florida, police officer shot during an early-morning traffic stop Tuesday has died, authorities said, as a massive manhunt was under way for two suspects.
"Doctors have pronounced Officer David Curtis deceased," Tampa police spokeswoman Laura McElroy said in a statement. "His family has chosen to harvest his organs so he will remain on life support for the next couple of hours while that takes place."
Officer Jeffrey Kocab was pronounced dead at a Tampa hospital after the incident about 2:15 a.m. ET Tuesday. Both officers were 31, according to the department.
Kocab's wife was due to give birth next week, while Curtis leaves behind his wife and four sons, ages 9, 6, 5 and 8 months.
Curtis had pulled over a vehicle and found its male passenger had an outstanding warrant for "minor violations," Tampa Police Chief Jane Castor told reporters Tuesday. Kocab responded to back Curtis up, and "as they put their hands on the suspect, the suspect spun around, pulled a firearm and shot both police officers," she said.
Curtis pulled the car over because it had no license plate, authorities said in a statement. "Officer Curtis determined the passenger was wanted on a worthless check warrant" out of Jacksonville, Florida, the statement said. He called for backup and Kocab arrived. Both officers approached the vehicle on the passenger side.

Officers responding to a 9-1-1 call from a witness found both officers on the ground and began cardiopulmonary resuscitation, police said. Both were taken to Tampa General Hospital. Kocab was pronounced dead shortly after arrival, while Curtis was put on life support and later pronounced dead.
Both Curtis and Kocab were shot in the upper body, Castor said. They were shot at close range, she told reporters, and body armor would not have helped them avoid injury.
Police dogs had tracked the suspect to a location, she said, and door-to-door searches were under way.
"We haven't positively Identified a suspect, but we have a very good suspect in this situation, and there's probably a great deal more to it than just that misdemeanor warrant," Castor said.
"This is an unbelievable tragedy for these families, and for the larger family of TPD, and for the larger family of the city of Tampa," Mayor Pam Iorio said. "Our hearts are just breaking."
Kocab had been with Tampa police for 14 months, police said, and moved through the TPD's training program at an accelerated pace "because of his outstanding police skills."
Castor said he previously was with the Plant City, Florida, police. Curtis has been with the department for three years and eight months, according to McElroy. He previously was a jail deputy with the Hillsborough County Sheriff's Office.
Castor described both men as "solid police officers and outstanding individuals" who both worked the midnight shift. Kocab, she said, was "looking forward to being a father," and Curtis was devoted to his wife and sons.
Police were searching for a red 1994 Toyota Camry connected to the shooting and an African-American male and female, McElroy said. The male was described as being in his mid- to late 20s, about 5 feet 10 inches tall and weighing about 150 to 170 pounds. He is thought to be wearing brown shorts, a white T-shirt, a black vest and white sneakers, police said. No detailed description was available on the woman.
The officers' deaths come nearly a year after Tampa police Cpl. Mike Roberts was killed in the line of duty last August, Florida Attorney General Bill McCollum said in a statement.
"The safety of Tampa residents was the first priority for Officers Kocab and Curtis, and today they selflessly made the ultimate sacrifice to protect their city," the attorney general said. "They will certainly be missed not only by their loved ones, but also by the city they worked to keep safe."
Authorities set up a perimeter around the shooting scene and were conducting "an extensive search for evidence," police said. "The search for the suspects extends statewide. The suspects are considered armed and very dangerous."
Police were asking to be contacted by anyone who witnessed the incident, has information on the suspects or spots the vehicle.

CAL
July 4th, 2010, 08:41 PM
http://www.foxnews.com/us/2010/07/02/police-suspect-killing-tampa-officers-routine-traffic-stop-arrest/

Two police officers gunned down during a traffic stop were remembered Saturday as family men devoted to protecting the public, while the convicted felon accused of killing them was ordered to remain in jail the day after he surrendered.
Dontae Rashawn Morris, 24, was denied bail at his first court appearance Saturday on two counts of first-degree murder in the shooting deaths of officers David Curtis and Jeffrey Kocab early Tuesday.
Morris turned himself in at a police station about 10:30 p.m. Friday after detectives spent more than 30 hours negotiating with an associate of his. His surrender ended an intense manhunt in which hundreds of officers in tactical gear combed apartment buildings, vacant homes and even waterways. Detectives fielded more than 400 tips.
Hundreds attended a funeral for Curtis and Kocab on Saturday morning at the Idlewild Baptist Church in Lutz. The church's pastor, Ken Whitten, opened the service.
"We wanted to have a place where we could come under one roof as a city and a family and as friends to mourn, to grieve, to cry," Whitten said. "Maybe even to laugh, and to honor those who paid the ultimate sacrifice for us this day."
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Tampa police Officer Dave Michelson said Curtis was a loving father, devoted husband and proud police officer.
"When Dave wasn't working, he was racing home to be with his family," Michelson said.
"To him, being a police officer was personal. It wasn't a job — it was a calling."
Charlie Helm, a Plant City police officer, said Kocab didn't quit working when the shift was over.
"In his free time, he nearly cleaned out a whole apartment complex of crime," Helm said.
It was about 2:15 a.m. Tuesday when Curtis pulled over a man and woman in a red Toyota Camry. He called for backup after seeing the man was wanted in Jacksonville for writing a bad check. Six minutes after Curtis and Kocab approached the car's passenger side, a witness called 911 to report they were shot. The officers were pronounced dead at a hospital.
At the hearing Saturday, Assistant Public Defender Charles Traina said his office has a conflict of interest in representing Morris because it represents Cortnee Brantley, who also faces charges in the case. Another attorney will be appointed for Morris.
Brantley, the car's driver, was charged Friday with a federal count of witnessing a felony and not reporting it. A message left seeking comment on Brantley's charges wasn't immediately returned by the public defender's office.
Police said Morris also was suspected in two other slayings, and by early Saturday he faced a third murder charge in the May 18 shooting death of a man killed outside his family's Tampa apartment. A statement from Tampa police Public Information Officer Laura McElroy said ballistic tests indicate the same gun was used in the officers' killings this week.
In the May 18 shooting, 21-year-old Derek Anderson was killed outside his family's apartment after detectives believe the shooter tried to take Anderson's backpack.
Hillsborough County Sheriff David Gee said Friday night that Morris also is considered a suspect in the June 8 death of a father of four who was found badly hurt on the side of a road and died while he was being taken to a hospital.

FerretLE426
July 6th, 2010, 03:45 AM
There is no such thing as a "routine stop" or "minor violation" be safe out there guys. If you knew you were going to get in a gun fight you probably would go have your teeth drilled or something alot less painfull.

RIP Officers

Feet
July 12th, 2010, 04:32 PM
RIP.
BOLO'S are already circulated.