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News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Marshal, LA Officer Shot, Suspect Killed In Siege
Title:US CA: Marshal, LA Officer Shot, Suspect Killed In Siege
Published On:2000-11-21
Source:Los Angeles Times (CA)
Fetched On:2008-09-03 01:51:58
MARSHAL, L.A. OFFICER SHOT, SUSPECT KILLED IN SIEGE

Crime: Police break into Marina apartment after a 13-hour standoff, find
man dead. Wounded officers are expected to recover.

Police who had lobbed tear gas for hours at a Marina del Rey apartment
after a narcotics suspect shot and wounded two lawmen Monday finally blew
off the apartment door and searched room to room, finding the suspect dead
after a 13-hour siege.

Police said they didn't know what killed the 20-year-old man, whose body
was found about midnight.

Shortly after 4 p.m., police had begun firing tear gas canisters into the
fifth-floor apartment on Lincoln Boulevard where the suspect, Joseph Macio
Allain, was holed up. But the acrid smoke from eight canisters, which
wafted over the neighborhood, failed to dislodge him.

At about 10 p.m., the Los Angeles Police Department bomb squad blew the
apartment door off its hinges because police suspected it had been wired
with explosives. A SWAT team was inside going room to room at about 10:40
p.m., proceeding on the assumption that the apartment might have been
booby-trapped, said LAPD Cmdr. Sharon Papa.

The officers Allain allegedly shot earlier, Deputy Marshal Larry Gloth, 31,
and LAPD Senior Lead Officer Gerry Smedley, 44, were treated at local
hospitals. Doctors said both were in stable condition and expected to
recover fully.

Police negotiators had talked by telephone with the suspect.

Officers said Allain was arrested Oct. 30 and charged with possession of
two kilos of cocaine as a result of an indictment handed down Oct. 18 in
connection with a drug case in Tennessee. On Nov. 7, he was released on
$50,000 bail, on the condition that he wear an electronic bracelet so
officers could monitor his whereabouts.

After he violated the terms of his bail last weekend by removing the
bracelet, two marshals went to the upscale Marina Pointe apartment complex
about 11 a.m. Monday to rearrest him, officials said.

"They knocked on the door," said Sgt. John Pasquariello, a spokesman for
the LAPD. "Instead of opening the door, he answers with gunfire from a
high-powered assault rifle."

Aldean Lee, an assistant chief with the Marshals Service, said a shot
struck Gloth in the right arm.

A woman who lives nearby heard the shots, came out and helped the other
marshal drag Gloth into her apartment, Lt. Horace Frank said.

A neighbor who lives a floor above said the uninjured marshal was
screaming, "Somebody, please call police!"

Julie Wright, 25, and Tracy Frost, 32, both flight attendants with Virgin
Atlantic Airways, said they were walking out of a gymnasium in the shopping
complex across the street when they noticed police officers standing beside
the patrol cars that had rolled up in front of the apartment complex.

"We heard six or seven shots," said Wright. "Then we saw an officer go down
on his back."

"He didn't move," Frost said.

Pasquariello said Allain apparently had opened fire from his apartment
window on the police in the street.

Witnesses said several officers returned fire, but the suspect apparently
was not hit.

Fellow officers put Smedley, who had suffered a leg wound, into a patrol
car and rushed him to Daniel Freeman Marina Hospital. Doctors there said
the bullet had passed cleanly through his right calf and he was released.

Smedley, who is married and has two children, has been with the department
since 1982, after service in the Marine Corps. "Praise God that he's OK,"
said his wife, Debora.

A Los Angeles Fire Department helicopter landed on the street to take Gloth
to UCLA Medical Center, where he underwent surgery to repair a wound in the
right biceps. Doctors said he would be hospitalized for two to three days.

Meanwhile, helmeted Los Angeles SWAT officers sealed off the area around
the apartment, evacuating the residents, who were being given temporary
shelter in a nearby Marriott hotel.

The standoff tied up traffic in the Marina for hours as scores of police
cordoned off the area. Dozens of shoppers at the Marina Market Place across
the street were stranded when police refused to let them move their cars.

Pasquariello said it had been hoped that the negotiating team could
persuade Allain to surrender, but after hours of talking, officers decided
on stronger measures.

The Red Cross told evacuated residents just before midnight that they could
return to their homes shortly.

The Marshals Service pursues and arrests the majority of federal fugitives
in the United States, often working with local law enforcement agents as
backup.

Times staff writers Eric Malnic, Louis Sahagun, John Mitchell, David
Rosenzweig, Thuy-Doan Le, Nedra Rhone and Noaki Schwartz contributed to
this story.
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