Officers Ricky Bryant Jr. and Eric Barker of the DeKalb County (GA) Police Department were shot and killed while working an off-duty job as police officers. Many of the details have not yet been released, and it may be some time before all of the details are released.
While we don’t know why Officers Bryant and Barker were killed, we do know that they are not the only pair of police officers to be killed on the same call. In my previous entry, Cover Your Partner and Watch Your Six, I talk about a few of the incidents in 2007 where multiple officers were killed in the same incident.
Two things we need to make sure that we do correctly on the street: contact and cover and searching from a position of advantage. Contact and cover is one of the best tactics that officers can use to maintain a safe working environment when dealing with suspicious people. One officer handles all of the interactions, while the second officer maintains an overwatch position. The cover officer watches the suspect and the surroundings looking for any possible danger.
The second thing officers must do is to establish a position of advantage when searching people. Placing people against vehicles, walls, etc. does not place the officer in the position of advantage. Reduce the suspect’s ability by pulling them off balance and controlling their hands. Don’t get lazy when frisking or searching people.
Keep Officer Bryant’s and Officer Barker’s families in your prayers, and make sure you come home to yours tonight.
Stay safe!
Arrest made in DeKalb police killings
Officers were frisking a man before being shot, witness saysDeKalb County Police have arrested one man in the shooting deaths of two off-duty officers and were searching for at least one more suspect late Wednesday night.
“The is step one,” said Police Chief Terrell Bolton at a hastily called news conference Wednesday night. He then spoke to other suspects: “We will not rest until all of you are brought in and justice is served.”
Herbie DeShawn Durham, 32, was charged with two counts of murder at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday after being questioned at police headquarters, Bolton said.
The chief refused to elaborate on any motive for the killings or how Durham was identified and captured. Bolton released few details about Durham, except to say he had a criminal record. The chief instead focused on the department’s anguish. “This is the beginning of the healing process,” he said.
A witness said the two off-duty DeKalb County police officers, who were moonlighting as security guards, were apparently frisking a man in an apartment complex parking lot moments before both officers were shot and killed early Wednesday morning
Derrick Murchison, 38, said he looked out his window and saw that both officers Ricky Bryant Jr. and Eric Barker had pulled up in their personal vehicles they used in their off-duty job as security guards at the complex.
“They had asked the dude for his license…I looked out and he was on the hood like this,” Murchison said, demonstrating that the man was standing with his hands extended on top of the car.
Murchison said he went back to playing a video game but then his girlfriend, Michelle Payne, jumped up and said she heard shots. He pushed her down away from the window. “Then it stopped,” he said.
In the parking lot outside, Bryant and Barker lay mortally wounded. Their killer or killers fled, leaving only the echo of gunshots outside Murchison and Payne’s bedroom window.
Gunshots are frequent near their Glenwood Gardens apartments in southwest DeKalb. But not two dead police officers.
“I was just so hysterical I had to let my daughter-in-law talk to [911 operators], because I just saw two bodies lying out there in the parking lot,” Payne said Wednesday.
The officers’ deaths fueled a ferocious manhunt that stretched from southwest DeKalb to downtown Atlanta and beyond. More than 100 law enforcement personnel combed yards, blocked off streets and stopped traffic to search car trunks and people. Atlanta police officers closed down a mall near the Five Points MARTA station after getting a tip about possible suspects.
DeKalb officials and community leaders decried what one called “an outright cowardly act.” Authorities offered a $60,000 reward for information leading to the arrest of those responsible for the killings. New Birth Missionary Baptist Church Bishop Eddie Long put up $10,000 of the reward, with other contributors including the U.S. Marshal’s office and talk show host Michael Baisden.
Both Bryant, 26, and Barker, 33, had families. Earlier in the day, their deaths left the DeKalb police chief literally shaking his fist in anger.
Anyone who could see the officers “lie there on the asphalt in the middle of the night…and you remain silent, you’re not my brother, you’re not my sister if you go down that road,” Bolton said during a news conference earlier in the day at the site of the killings.
He had a blunt message for the killers: “We’re going to watch, we’re going to fight, we’re going to pray, but most of all we’re going to hunt them down.”
Barker had been with the force for four years, Bryant for two. Authorities said they were killed while responding to a suspicious person report.
Bryant, father of four, juggled multiple jobs, according to Tiffany Wiggins, assistant manager of the Village at Stone Mountain apartments. Bryant offered courtesy security assistance in exchange for a discount on rent, she said.
Bryant moved into the complex about two months ago and was often called to help with domestic disputes and arguments, according to Forrest Minor, a security officer who worked with Bryant at the complex.
Wiggins said Bryant was separated from his wife and that his young children stayed with him off and on for weeks at a time. They often played at the apartment playground.
Wiggins said Bryant was shy and funny, and liked to go the movies. She said Bryant’s oldest daugther often called him on his cell phone to check on him.
Ranardo Seamon, a leasing agent at the complex, said one of Bryant’s rooms was filled with toys and remote control cars for the children.
Minor, the security officer, said he saw Bryant Tuesday evening as he left to go to the apartment complex where he was killed. He said Bryant had just finished an overtime shift with county police.
“He was telling me he was going to see us later to help us out,” said Minor.
Though Bryant had lived at the Village at Stone Mountain just a short while, employees there had grown close to him. Some went home early Wednesday, distraught over his death.
Bolton, the county police chief, said both officers were in uniform at the time of the shooting.
Teofil Taut, who owns the apartment complex, said he hired the officers about two months ago after encountering problems with homeless people breaking into vacant units. About half of the 176 units are occupied, Taut said.
“What a horrible, horrible way to end your life,” Bolton said. “Apparently, they had no chance,” he said, adding that the officers were “like my sons.”
Police questioned several residents of the Glenwood Gardens apartments, including Derrick Murchison and tenants from an adjoining apartment.
Wednesday’s shootings marked the first time two metro Atlanta officers were killed in the same incident since July 23, 1999, when two Cobb SWAT officers were killed by shotgun in a raid on an Austell-area house.
Related posts:
- Police Officers Killed In Training: A Report by the National Tactical Officers Association
- Obama Cuts Survivor Benefits for Officers Killed in the Line of Duty
- Can Working the Graveyard Shift Cause More Cancer in Police Officers? Maybe…
- 2010 Law Enforcement Officers Killed & Assaulted
- Off-Duty Survival and Revenge Attacks on Police Officers



