You know it's a shame that the innocent should pay for the crimes of the guilty. Then how innocent are the innocent as this poor woman died at the hands of the police accidentally just as Barbara Dawson died at the hands of the florida pigs ON PURPOSE when she was trying to get help at a hospital! God is punishing you for your perfidy and racism just like that poor kid was eaten by an alligator at disneyworld! Quit doing evil, for these are warnings to you that God doesn't like your racism, police murders, and other things that you're doing! And God is showing you that He's gonna' make you pay for your crimes! Just like the incident in gainesvill florida. Here's the story.
Woman fatally shot playing 'officer' in Florida police academy drill
Story highlights
- Lee Coel, officer who accidentally killed woman, joined force in 2014
- Police chief: Gun used in a demonstration accidentally had a live round in it
(CNN)A
police officer accidentally shot and killed a retired Minnesota mother
of two during a civilian police drill in Punta Gorda, Florida, that was
supposed to employ only blank ammunition, police said.
The
officer, identified as Lee Coel, shot Mary Knowlton on Tuesday night
during a "shoot/don't shoot" role-play scenario in which officers make
decisions on using simulated lethal force, Punta Gorda Police Chief Tom
Lewis said at a news conference.
The
retired librarian was playing an officer in the scenario, which was
held just outside the police complex, officials said. Coel was playing
the role of a "bad guy" when he opened fire as nearly three dozen people
looked on.
Knowlton clutched her abdomen, then fell to the ground, a witness said in an account published in the Fort Myers News-Press.
"I
thought she was just acting at first," photographer Sue Paquin wrote.
"Then thought maybe she had had a heart attack from the sound of the
gunfire. But then I saw the blood."
The
gun the officer used mistakenly had a live round in it, Lewis said.
Knowlton was transported to a local hospital where she was pronounced
dead.
State authorities are
investigating the shooting. At a news conference, the police chief said
he didn't want to divulge too many specifics because of the ongoing
investigation. Asked how the real bullet found its way into the weapon
used in the drill, he said the department was unaware there was any live
ammo for the revolver. Officers thought there was only blank ammunition
available, he said.
Victim wanted to show support for police
Knowlton
had been speaking with her family Sunday about the negative press
police had received after a series of officer-involved shootings across
the nation. She decided to attend the civilian police academy to show
her support for local law enforcement, said her son, Steve Knowlton.
"Our society needs them and people are human and they make mistakes, but that's why she went there," he told CNN.
The
73-year-old librarian originally hailed from Minnesota, according to
CNN affiliate WINK. She was listed as being on board of directors for
the Friends of the Punta Gorda Library.
A
longtime friend told CNN she loved children, books and learning and had
myriad friends through her philanthropic work and her years with the
Rosemount-Apple Valley-Eagan School District in Minnesota. She worked
there for 20 years and continued part-time after her retirement, her son
said.
Punta Gorda police Lt. Katie Heck said she couldn't verify how many times Knowlton was shot.
Citizens Academy
The
scenario was part of a two-hour training course sponsored by the local
Chamber of Commerce. While the police department has conducted five or
six such sessions in the past, this was the first sponsored by the
chamber, Punta Gorda police Lt. Katie Heck told CNN.
Among
the program's highlights are a tour of the police department, a
"show-and-tell" of various equipment used by police and the reenactment
of scenarios in which officers have to make decisions on whether to fire
their weapons, Heck said.
The
police chief told reporters Thursday that his department had developed
the role-playing exercise after seeing similar scenarios grow in
popularity at agencies across the country.
"These
scenarios foster conversation between citizens and police about how
fast officers are required to make decisions in use of force incidents.
Our department has conducted these role-play exercises over the past two
years, running more than a dozen separate participants safely through
the scenarios," he said. "Obviously, in this circumstance, something
went terribly wrong."
Tuesday's
course was attended by 35 civilians. The city called in the chaplain to
counsel those participants and has arranged free counseling services for
anyone else in the community who might need it.
'Just a doer'
Carolyn
Hartwigsen of Edina, Minnesota, met Knowlton in the early 1980s when
they were both attending graduate school at Mankato State University.
The pair later returned to Mankato State for their education specialist
degrees, joining forces on a thesis about the qualities of effective
schools.
Though the latter degree
qualified Knowlton to apply for school principal positions, she
continued to work as a library media specialist, Hartwigsen said.
Reached
Wednesday afternoon, Hartwigsen told CNN she was amid a walk "to clear
my head of this tragedy that is filling my heart with so much pain."
Knowlton had many friends and was always smiling, Hartwigsen said. She was active in the women's philanthropic organization, P.E.O. International, she said.
Knowlton and her husband lived in Prior Lake, Minnesota, before retiring to Punta Gorda several years ago, she said.
"She
just drew you to want to be a part of whatever she was doing because
you knew if she was doing it, it was worthwhile," she said.
Indeed,
Lewis said he knew Knowlton personally and she was active in the
community, regularly attending events in the area. She also volunteered
to keep a local church's library organized, her son said.
Knowlton
could make whoever she was talking to feel like they were her best
friend, said Hartwigsen. She cared about everyone and her demeanor told
people it was OK to open up and share their own lives, she said.
"Mary
was just a doer," Hartwigsen said. "There are people who always have
that positive radiance about them. You just always want to be around
them."
Hartwigsen said her "heart
goes out" to Coel, the officer who accidentally killed Knowlton, but at
the same time she feels the Punta Gorda Police Department could have
taken more precautions to make sure this sort of thing didn't happen.
Knowlton's son, Steve, said he, too, questions how something like this could happen.
"I
just wish they would've done it a different way," he said. "Why did he
have to shoot at her? ... No one should have a real gun pointed at them.
Anything's possible. I've heard of people getting shot by blanks and
being killed. So obviously there's a chance for danger there."
'Pray for Mary's husband'
Lewis
described Coel, who joined the force in March 2014, as grief-stricken
and said officers have been assigned to him to monitor his psychological
stability. He was placed on administrative leave immediately following
the shooting, the chief said.
"Officer
Coel is frequently seen throughout our community providing department
presentations and tours and specifically role-playing in these
shoot/don't shoot scenarios as well as a police presence at youth and
neighborhood events," the department said in a news release.
Steve
Knowlton told CNN that he is sure Coel is "in the worst hell of his
life" after the shooting, "but I want him to know that we know that I'm
sure he didn't intend on this happening, and I forgive him."
Heck
said she would pass the son's words along to Coel, adding that Steve
Knowlton's forgiveness shows he is just gracious as his mother.
City leaders and the police department are "absolutely devastated" by Knowlton's death, Lewis said.
"If
you pray, you pray for Mary's husband and family and for all of the
officers and witnesses that were involved in this incident. Everyone
involved is in a state of overwhelming shock and grief."
The Florida Department of Law Enforcement's investigation into the shooting could take weeks, he said.
Citizen
police academies are generally encouraged as a way to bolster ties
between police department and the communities they protect. A report
last year from the President's Task Force on 21st-Century Policing said,
"Law enforcement agencies should engage youth and communities in joint
training with law enforcement, citizen academies, ride-alongs, problem
solving teams, community action teams, and quality of life teams."
In the United States, 33,636 people died from firearm-related incidents in 2013, the most recent data available from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
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