SAPD: Police officer shoots, kills himself in patrol car
Male officer was 10-year veteran
By Ben Spicer - Web Editor , Josh
Skurnik - Reporter , Bill Barajas - Reporter
SAN ANTONIO - A 10-year veteran
of the San Antonio Police Department was found dead Tuesday of an apparent
self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head inside his marked patrol unit, police
officials said.
The male officer, who was in full
uniform, was found just before 7:30 a.m. at Loop 410 and Port Entry on the
city's East Side.
According to preliminary
information from SAPD, the officer didn't return to a substation after his
shift ended at 6:30 a.m., and other officers were sent to investigate. He was
found dead in the patrol unit.
Vincent Jordan, a truck driver,
said at around 5 a.m. he turned into Port Entry without a signal and saw the
patrol car with no lights on and thought he would get pulled over. But the
officer just put his brake lights on.
Jordan said when he left a half
hour later, the officer was still there and thought it was strange that police
would be targeting speeders at that location.
"No officer sat here
before," Jordan said. "They sat down there before but never here.
That's unbelievable."
SAPD family assistance officers,
chaplains, and SAPD psychological services will be available to department
members, officials said.
The incident is being
investigated as an apparent suicide, officials said.
The leading killer of law
enforcement officers is suicide. Click here to see statistics on officer
suicides and how to help prevent it.
Social worker discusses impact of
suicide on loved ones
Valeria Lerma, a social worker
and therapist at the Center for Health Care Services, said suicide is an
impulse, but there "usually is a long history of things, and the main
thing there is hopelessness."
Lerma said this sort of loss can
leave family, friends and co-workers with a range of emotions.
"The tendency (is) to kind
of replay the moment, the hours, the day kind of leading up to the loss in an
effort to try and see if there were any signs missed, anything they could have
said, anything they could have done to prevent it," Lerma said.
She said the natural tendency is
for loved ones to try to push the emotions away, but she said that is the worst
thing to do.
"Most of the counseling is
going to be geared toward allowing the individual to feel safe, in a safe environment,
where they can fully experience what it is that they're feeling," Lerma
said. "Because the sooner you are able to face those feelings, the sooner
you'll be able to deal with them."
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