SWAT is not immune from being included among these tragic deaths, as evidenced by the first death of an LAPD SWAT officer during an operation. During a hostage rescue attempt in February 2008, Randall Simmons was killed and his partner, James Veenstra, was critically wounded. The sobering reality for SWAT is if it could happen to LAPD, it could happen to any SWAT team.
Since the release of the 2008 midterm report, more names have been added to the roster of fallen officers. The most recent occurred early Sunday morning, during a traffic stop by Twinsburg (Ohio) officer Joshua Miktarian. Backup officers found the 11-year veteran K-9 officer lying next to his cruiser, gun still holstered, four gunshot wounds to the head. Rushed to a trauma center, Miktarian succumbed to his wounds, leaving behind his wife (also a police officer) and three-month-old daughter. In the ensuing police/SWAT manhunt, the suspect was arrested with the officer’s handcuff still on one wrist.
Simultaneous to the Twinsburg incident, a suburban Cleveland SWAT team TASERed a barricaded suspect who failed to respond to negotiation attempts. However, he pulled out one of the probes, then pointed a rifle at SWAT. A SWAT cover officer shot and killed the suspect.
Earlier in the week, Northeast Ohio experienced two other deadly officer-involved incidents. In Canton, a 76-year-old retired sergeant Earl Schoeneman was found murdered inside his home. An ex-con neighbor was arrested for the brutal murder. Adding to the tragedy, Sgt. Schoeneman was the CPD’s 1975 Officer of the Year, who survived being shot five times during a 1967 robbery.
Last Thursday, 2,500 miles away in the rugged, steep, wooded Saratoga Hills of Santa Clara County (Calif.) another deadly law enforcement incident was playing out. It began as a raid by 20 LE officers on a marijuana farm. In recent years, sophisticated covert, organized marijuana operations in remote California parkland have been linked to Mexican drug cartels. These operations are patrolled by heavily armed guards and have engaged in several shootouts with police.
In the Saratoga raid, police were confronted by three armed subjects, with police shooting and killing one and the other two fleeing, setting off a massive manhunt by 100 officers, helicopters, canine units, and five SWAT teams. The search area was 100 acres of extreme difficult, steep terrain and heat. The remaining two suspects escaped capture. Recovered in the raid were more than 10,000 marijuana plants.