Three of the four officers killed in a shooting at a North Carolina home have been identified.
Samuel ‘Sam’ Polche, William ‘Alden’ Elliot and Charlotte Police Officer Joshua Eyer died Monday following the horrific shooting while attempting to serve the court order. Both Polche and Elliot were officials with the North Carolina Department of Adult Corrections working with the United States Marshal’s office.
The US marshal killed in the attack has not been identified.
Officers were serving an arrest warrant for a felon wanted for possession of a firearm at the home, police said. The wanted suspect first shot at officers as they approached the suburban home. Police shot the offender dead in the front yard. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Chief Johnny Jennings said.
A second person then fired at the officers from inside the home where a high-powered rifle was found, Jennings said. A woman and a 17-year-old boy were found in the home after a three-hour standoff that included armored vehicles crashing into the suburban home in a wooded neighborhood and tearing out doors and windows.
Several police officers were injured while attempting to help rescue their fallen officers when they were injured.
“Today is an absolutely tragic day for the city of Charlotte and for the policing profession,” Jennings said, according to WRAL. “Today we lost some heroes who are simply trying to keep our community safe.”
Charlotte Police Officer Joshua Eyer also died Monday night. He was one of four officers killed.
Officer Samuel ‘Sam’ Polche (left) and Officer William ‘Alden’ Elliot (right) were killed Monday night in a shooting at a home in Charlotte, North Carolina. Both worked for the North Carolina Department of Adult Corrections.
Four deputies died after a U.S. Marshals task force serving a warrant against a felon wanted for possession of a firearm was shot at.
The wanted suspect first shot at officers as they approached the suburban home in Charlotte and was killed in the front yard.
Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Chief Johnny Jennings speaks at a news conference.
Another member of the task force, made up of federal agents and other officers from across the region, was injured.
Neighbors said gunshots continued for several minutes after the shooting broke out.
WSOC-TV showed the incredible scene showing an armored vehicle from a helicopter They drove through yards and knocked over recycling bins before officers removed a person with blood on his shirt and loaded him into an ambulance.
After the house was cleared, the station’s helicopter pilot said he couldn’t show the front yard of the house because the scene was too disturbing.
Several armored vehicles were in gardens and driveways near the oldest suburban neighborhood on a tree-lined street with brick houses.
On one street there was a broken window, broken blinds and an entire door leaning against one of the vehicles.
Many roads in the area, including Interstate 77, were closed so ambulances could reach hospitals faster.
A second person then shot at the officers from inside the house where a high-powered rifle was found.
A woman and a 17-year-old boy were found in the home after a three-hour standoff that included armored vehicles crashing into the suburban home.
Charlotte Mayor Vi Lyles chokes up while speaking at a press conference.
Television images showed ambulances speeding towards hospitals with several vehicles with sirens in front and behind.
Kiashia Williams was driving home when she heard several gunshots separated by a few seconds.
“The ambulances, the police and everything else started coming running,” Williams said as she waited in her car to be allowed to go home and see her daughter, who broadcast what she saw on social media.
Four Charlotte-Mecklenburg schools were closed around afternoon dismissal time, but that was lifted in the late afternoon, the district said.
Police urged people to stay away from the neighborhood and asked residents to stay inside their homes.
North Carolina Governor Roy Cooper said he was in contact with Charlotte authorities and offered all state resources to help.
Charlotte Fire Department Capt. Brian Cunningham, right, hugs Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Chief Johnny Jennings at a news conference.
A Charlotte Mecklenburg police officer carries a gun while walking through the neighborhood where an officer-involved shooting occurred in Charlotte.
Several police vehicles respond in the neighborhood
North Carolina Governor Roy Cooper said he was in contact with Charlotte authorities and offered all state resources to help.
A Gofundme has been launched to try to raise $250,000 to help the families of the victim officers.
The last U.S. Marshal shot and killed in the line of duty was in November 2018. Chase White was shot in Tucson, Arizona, by a man wanted for stalking local law enforcement officers, the agency said.
The Carolinas Regional Fugitive Task Force is headquartered in Charlotte and includes 70 federal, state and local agencies.
Fugitive task forces are interagency collaborations to find and arrest criminal suspects.
In six years, the regional task force has apprehended more than 8,900 fugitives, the U.S. Marshals Service said on its website.
In March 2007, two Charlotte-Mecklenburg police officers were killed in response to a domestic dispute by someone who was not directly involved in the fight.
Demeatrius Antonio Montgomery is serving a life sentence for the murders of officers Jeffrey Shelton and Sean Clark.