"Whatever officer getting shot, need to be. Y'all all need to be."
"We got guns too," said one of the many citizens in Sacramento, California harassing and taunting police after the shooting of a female officer this week.
"Whatever officer getting shot, need to be. Y'all all need to be. Y'all all need to," said another person.
That officer, 26-year-old Tara O'Sullivan, died later that evening. She had been shot with a rifle while responding to a domestic violence call. As O'Sullivan and other police were helping a female victim gather her belongings and leave the home where the domestic violence allegedly occurred, the assailant opened fire.
From the public statement by Sacramento PD:
On June 19, 2019, the Sacramento Police Department received a call regarding a disturbance between a male and a female. Officers made contact with the involved female at a residence in the 3700 block of Esperanza Drive. Officers then responded to a residence in the 200 block of Redwood Avenue to standby while the involved female gathered some belongings from a residence. At approximately 6:10 p.m., officers on scene reported shots had been fired, and an officer was struck by gun fire. The officer who was shot, Tara Christina O'Sullivan succumbed to her injuries after being transported to the hospital. The suspect, 45-year old Adel Sambrano Ramos, was booked into the Sacramento County Main Jail on charges relating to the murder of Officer O'Sullivan.
O'Sullivan was shot first, and was down in the backyard of that home as police attempted to reach her while the gunman continued firing at police.
The suspect has been arrested and charged.
The officers in the video below, shared by a photojournalist with Comstock, were securing that horrific and deadly scene when apparent residents of the neighborhood gathered and began berating them.
The video shows the residents taunting the cops, praising the shooting of the officer, and even threatening police with more violence.
“Take that gun off. I'll whoop your little butt," one woman's voice can be heard saying. “All y'all cowards."
Keep in mind those cowards were there to protect a female victim of domestic violence as she attempted to leave a bad situation. It is a miracle that the victim was not also wounded or killed by the ambush shooter.Keys shared more video later via YouTube.
Twitter has a hard 2.5 minutes limit on video uploads. Watch the full video (actually two videos combined into one), which runs more than 25 minutes, at the link: http://bit.ly/2Y24adA
95 people are talking about this
Police also released bodycam footage of the shooting on Friday.
"We got guns too," said one of the many citizens in Sacramento, California harassing and taunting police after the shooting of a female officer this week.
"Whatever officer getting shot, need to be. Y'all all need to be. Y'all all need to," said another person.
That officer, 26-year-old Tara O'Sullivan, died later that evening. She had been shot with a rifle while responding to a domestic violence call. As O'Sullivan and other police were helping a female victim gather her belongings and leave the home where the domestic violence allegedly occurred, the assailant opened fire.
From the public statement by Sacramento PD:
On June 19, 2019, the Sacramento Police Department received a call regarding a disturbance between a male and a female. Officers made contact with the involved female at a residence in the 3700 block of Esperanza Drive. Officers then responded to a residence in the 200 block of Redwood Avenue to standby while the involved female gathered some belongings from a residence. At approximately 6:10 p.m., officers on scene reported shots had been fired, and an officer was struck by gun fire. The officer who was shot, Tara Christina O'Sullivan succumbed to her injuries after being transported to the hospital. The suspect, 45-year old Adel Sambrano Ramos, was booked into the Sacramento County Main Jail on charges relating to the murder of Officer O'Sullivan.
O'Sullivan was shot first, and was down in the backyard of that home as police attempted to reach her while the gunman continued firing at police.
The suspect has been arrested and charged.
The officers in the video below, shared by a photojournalist with Comstock, were securing that horrific and deadly scene when apparent residents of the neighborhood gathered and began berating them.
The video shows the residents taunting the cops, praising the shooting of the officer, and even threatening police with more violence.
Keep in mind those cowards were there to protect a female victim of domestic violence as she attempted to leave a bad situation. It is a miracle that the victim was not also wounded or killed by the ambush shooter.Keys shared more video later via YouTube.
Twitter has a hard 2.5 minutes limit on video uploads. Watch the full video (actually two videos combined into one), which runs more than 25 minutes, at the link: http://bit.ly/2Y24adA
95 people are talking about this
Police also released bodycam footage of the shooting on Friday.
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