News (Media Awareness Project) - US MD: 3 Charged in Shooting of Officer |
Title: | US MD: 3 Charged in Shooting of Officer |
Published On: | 2009-01-25 |
Source: | Baltimore Sun (MD) |
Fetched On: | 2009-01-26 07:33:34 |
3 CHARGED IN SHOOTING OF OFFICER
Eight-year City Police Department Veteran In Critical But Stable Condition
Police have charged three city men with attempted murder in the shooting
Friday of an undercover officer outside a troubled housing complex in the
Seton Hill neighborhood of Baltimore.
Officer Dante Arthur, an eight-year veteran of the city Police Department,
remained in critical but stable condition at Maryland Shock Trauma Center
yesterday after the first of what Police Commissioner Frederick H.
Bealefeld III said would likely be several reconstructive surgeries.
Arthur, who was shot twice in the face Friday night after attempting to
make an undercover drug purchase in the 400 block of Orchard St., is
expected to make a full recovery.
Police arrested Sean Cox, 22, of the 1600 block of Alta St.; Antwan Cox,
19, of the 400 block of Orchard St.; and Sean Smith, 23, of the 400 block
of Mount Holly St. Each was charged with attempted first-degree murder,
first-degree assault and other offenses. All have prior arrest records,
police said.
Residents and neighbors of Orchard Mews, a complex of subsidized
townhouses on Orchard Street, expressed frustration yesterday at what they
described as a failure of both complex managers and city officials to
respond to their complaints about drug sales, shootings and killings.
"We have spoken up," said one longtime resident, who did not give her name
for fear of making herself a target. "We need Sheila Dixon, we need the
federal government, we need someone to come in and clean this place up."
Asked about that frustration at a news conference yesterday, Dixon said
the city needs the community's help.
"There has to be a zero tolerance from our community and what they're
going to expect and not expect," she said. "We will do everything in our
power to make it safe, but they have to be engaged as well."
Bealefeld said police are doing what they can.
"Our city employees risked their lives to try to make that block safer,"
he said, "and two of them almost lost their lives in doing it. You know
what? My men, my women, they'll be back out there tonight. Now I don't
know how much more a community can expect its civil servants to do."
Police say Arthur and his partner, Officer Daniel Harper, were working in
plain clothes on the 500 block of Orchard St. about 8 p.m. Friday when
Sean Cox approached and offered to sell them cocaine. When they moved to
arrest him, police say, Cox became violent, attempted to take Arthur's
weapon and eventually broke free and fled.
Police say Antwan Cox and Smith opened fire on Arthur and Harper, and both
officers fired back. Arthur was shot in the jaw and the cheek. Bealefeld
said Harper, a three-year veteran of the force, exhibited "a great deal of
heroism" in continuing to fire as he assisted his wounded partner.
Smith was found inside 550 Orchard St., with a .357 magnum revolver
believed to have been used in the shooting and a 9 mm semiautomatic
handgun, police say. He had a gunshot wound in the left calf.
Police say Antwan Cox was arrested after he sought treatment at Maryland
General Hospital for a gunshot wound to the right leg. Bealefeld declined
to give details of the arrest of Sean Cox. Police have not determined
whether the two are related.
Arthur remained conscious until he was placed under anesthesia for
treatment at Shock Trauma, police say. Police union President Robert F.
Cherry said yesterday that Arthur's "spirits were good."
"It was a bad night, but there is good news," Cherry said. "The officer is
going to be fine. When we left around 3 in the morning he was still in
surgery. Dr. [James] O'Connor" - the director of thoracic and vascular
surgery at Shock Trauma - "is confident he's going to make a full
recovery."
Cherry said one bullet shattered Arthur's jaw and some teeth, and that the
other grazed a cheek.
Listed on the National Register of Historic Places, Seton Hill combines
some of the city's oldest rowhouses with the troubled housing complex
where neighbors say dealers run an open-air drug market.
Seton Hill Association President Karen French has counted at least four
murders in the neighborhood since she moved there 11 years ago. After
years of meetings with representatives of the mayor's office, police and
Orchard Mews yielded "few if no results," she said, the association
recently hired a lawyer.
"It just seems that the wheels move slowly, and we have to live with it,"
she said.
City Councilman William H. Cole IV blamed the management at Orchard Mews.
"I can say Central District has certainly put plenty of resources up
there, as evidenced by the fact that there were undercover officers
there," he said. "In my mind, the apartment complex is not taking its
responsibility to run a secure business seriously."
Cole said complex management has promised security guards, cameras and
better lighting.
Security cameras were visible at the complex yesterday, but neighbors said
they didn't work. Property manager Melva Smith declined to say whether the
complex had hired security. She expressed frustration that critics don't
want to help pay for security improvements.
"It seems like they want us to fit the bill outright," Smith said. "It
doesn't seem like they want to be in a partnership."
Eight-year City Police Department Veteran In Critical But Stable Condition
Police have charged three city men with attempted murder in the shooting
Friday of an undercover officer outside a troubled housing complex in the
Seton Hill neighborhood of Baltimore.
Officer Dante Arthur, an eight-year veteran of the city Police Department,
remained in critical but stable condition at Maryland Shock Trauma Center
yesterday after the first of what Police Commissioner Frederick H.
Bealefeld III said would likely be several reconstructive surgeries.
Arthur, who was shot twice in the face Friday night after attempting to
make an undercover drug purchase in the 400 block of Orchard St., is
expected to make a full recovery.
Police arrested Sean Cox, 22, of the 1600 block of Alta St.; Antwan Cox,
19, of the 400 block of Orchard St.; and Sean Smith, 23, of the 400 block
of Mount Holly St. Each was charged with attempted first-degree murder,
first-degree assault and other offenses. All have prior arrest records,
police said.
Residents and neighbors of Orchard Mews, a complex of subsidized
townhouses on Orchard Street, expressed frustration yesterday at what they
described as a failure of both complex managers and city officials to
respond to their complaints about drug sales, shootings and killings.
"We have spoken up," said one longtime resident, who did not give her name
for fear of making herself a target. "We need Sheila Dixon, we need the
federal government, we need someone to come in and clean this place up."
Asked about that frustration at a news conference yesterday, Dixon said
the city needs the community's help.
"There has to be a zero tolerance from our community and what they're
going to expect and not expect," she said. "We will do everything in our
power to make it safe, but they have to be engaged as well."
Bealefeld said police are doing what they can.
"Our city employees risked their lives to try to make that block safer,"
he said, "and two of them almost lost their lives in doing it. You know
what? My men, my women, they'll be back out there tonight. Now I don't
know how much more a community can expect its civil servants to do."
Police say Arthur and his partner, Officer Daniel Harper, were working in
plain clothes on the 500 block of Orchard St. about 8 p.m. Friday when
Sean Cox approached and offered to sell them cocaine. When they moved to
arrest him, police say, Cox became violent, attempted to take Arthur's
weapon and eventually broke free and fled.
Police say Antwan Cox and Smith opened fire on Arthur and Harper, and both
officers fired back. Arthur was shot in the jaw and the cheek. Bealefeld
said Harper, a three-year veteran of the force, exhibited "a great deal of
heroism" in continuing to fire as he assisted his wounded partner.
Smith was found inside 550 Orchard St., with a .357 magnum revolver
believed to have been used in the shooting and a 9 mm semiautomatic
handgun, police say. He had a gunshot wound in the left calf.
Police say Antwan Cox was arrested after he sought treatment at Maryland
General Hospital for a gunshot wound to the right leg. Bealefeld declined
to give details of the arrest of Sean Cox. Police have not determined
whether the two are related.
Arthur remained conscious until he was placed under anesthesia for
treatment at Shock Trauma, police say. Police union President Robert F.
Cherry said yesterday that Arthur's "spirits were good."
"It was a bad night, but there is good news," Cherry said. "The officer is
going to be fine. When we left around 3 in the morning he was still in
surgery. Dr. [James] O'Connor" - the director of thoracic and vascular
surgery at Shock Trauma - "is confident he's going to make a full
recovery."
Cherry said one bullet shattered Arthur's jaw and some teeth, and that the
other grazed a cheek.
Listed on the National Register of Historic Places, Seton Hill combines
some of the city's oldest rowhouses with the troubled housing complex
where neighbors say dealers run an open-air drug market.
Seton Hill Association President Karen French has counted at least four
murders in the neighborhood since she moved there 11 years ago. After
years of meetings with representatives of the mayor's office, police and
Orchard Mews yielded "few if no results," she said, the association
recently hired a lawyer.
"It just seems that the wheels move slowly, and we have to live with it,"
she said.
City Councilman William H. Cole IV blamed the management at Orchard Mews.
"I can say Central District has certainly put plenty of resources up
there, as evidenced by the fact that there were undercover officers
there," he said. "In my mind, the apartment complex is not taking its
responsibility to run a secure business seriously."
Cole said complex management has promised security guards, cameras and
better lighting.
Security cameras were visible at the complex yesterday, but neighbors said
they didn't work. Property manager Melva Smith declined to say whether the
complex had hired security. She expressed frustration that critics don't
want to help pay for security improvements.
"It seems like they want us to fit the bill outright," Smith said. "It
doesn't seem like they want to be in a partnership."
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