When the shots were fired, CPD immediately mobilized, and poured numerous officers, including patrol, aerial, K-9s, and SWAT into the area, effectively locking down a multi-block residential area. A massive house-to-house and yard-by-yard manhunt began, resulting in the arrests of four suspects—including the suspected shooter—by SWAT several blocks from the shooting scene.
On Feb. 7, Los Angeles SWAT Officer Randal (“Randy”) Simmons was killed and SWAT Officer Jimmy Veestra was critically wounded during a hostage rescue attempt. The suspect had reportedly called 911 to say he’d shot and killed three family members and challenged LAPD to “come and get him.” Responding officers recognized this as a SWAT situation and, shortly after SWAT arrived, they obtained intel that a crisis entry needed to be made.
During the crisis entry, the suspect reportedly fired at a window team then shot Officer Veenstra in the jaw. Officer Simmons did what he was trained to do, interjected himself between his downed partner and the threat, and was shot and killed by a bullet to the face. Other LAPD SWAT officers courageously rescued both officers, and also a downed hostage under fire by the suspect.
Tragically, Simmons died, as did the hostage, but Jimmy Veenstra survived. This tragedy is the first-ever line of duty hostile fire death in LAPD SWAT’s 41 year history, and has resulted in widespread sympathy, especially from the SWAT community. Randy Simmons’ death serves as a sobering reminder of the danger that all SWAT officers face. Simmons, a 27-year LAPD veteran with 20 years in SWAT left a wife and two children.
Last week’s TREXPO West conference and expo was dedicated to slain LAPD SWAT Officer Randy Simmons.