Morehead City Police Officer
Garrett Hardin was accidentally shot by a fellow officer during training.
A police officer who was shot in the sternum while training
outside the department Wednesday morning remained in a medically induced coma
at Vidant Medical Center Thursday afternoon, hospital officials and the
victim's family confirmed.
A fellow officer fired a bullet Wednesday during a training
exercise that shattered 22-year-old Garrett Hardin's sternum and ruptured three
lobes of his lung, said Lee Anne Flanagan, Hardin's aunt.
Flanagan's words were subdued as she recalled the doctors'
decision to induce Hardin's coma to preserve his health. Hardin underwent
extensive surgery Wednesday, she said, to remove bullet and bone
fragment-riddled tissue scattered in his right lung. But she was uncertain how
much tissue had to be removed.
"He has to be very still right now," she said,
adding that he will be in a coma for a few days.
Thursday afternoon, the family remained optimistic.
"Infection is our biggest fear right now," she
said.
Flanagan said it is her understanding that the training
exercise was not intended to accompany ammo and the shooting, which occurred in
the parking lot of the police department, stemmed from an uncleared weapon's
chamber.
"It's that tragic, that simple," she said, adding
that no final conclusions would be made until the SBI finished its
investigation.
Flanagan said the officer who accidentally shot her nephew
visited Hardin Wednesday night, and they are close friends.
"He was devastated," she said, stating that
Hardin's mom and the whole family has an "enormous amount of empathy"
for him.
Flanagan said her nephew, who will turn 23 on Nov. 10, has
been on the Morehead City Police Department, his first job, for about two
years.
"As long as I've known, he's always wanted to be a
police officer," Flanagan said.
She said he trained for the job in Greenville and was
offered a job in Havelock, his hometown, and Morehead City.
She said he chose Morehead City because wherever he goes in
Havelock he always has people calling out his name, and he thought it would be
easier to work as an officer somewhere where he didn't know everyone.
"He's such a great kid," she said, mentioning that
he is engaged to be married in May. "He has a lot to live for. He's young.
He's strong. He's completely healthy except for that bullet damage."
Flanagan told The Daily News that Morehead City Police
Department has been supportive of the family since the shooting. She said they
set up a hotel for the family to get rest and take showers after keeping vigil
at the hospital in Greenville; they set up a cot in Hardin's hospital room for
his mother to keep watch.
She said officers are keeping a constant presence at the
hospital to do anything they can for the family.
"The fraternal order of police, that's what they
do," she said.
Noelle Talley, spokesperson for the N.C. Department of
Justice, said the MCPD and the District Attorney requested the SBI investigate
the incident and that Thursday afternoon the investigation was still ongoing,
and the SBI was consulting with the District Attorney.
MCPD Chief Wrenn Johnson said in a Thursday press release
that all commentary and details would be "deferred dependent on the
resolution of the NC SBI investigation and or a change in the condition of
Officer Hardin."
The basic procedure for all SBI investigations is for agents
to gather facts and then share them with District Attorney who will then
determine if any charges will be filed, according to Talley.
SBI has statewide jurisdiction and does its own independent
investigation but in a case such as this, Talley said the SBI had to be asked
to do the investigation. As far as Talley knows, the SBI is the sole
investigating agency.