Sunday, January 27, 2013
Police arrested a man on Saturday, suspected of fatally
shooting a police officer and critically wounding two sheriff's deputies after
allegedly setting fire to a mobile home in south Louisiana, where an elderly
man's body was found.
A Chitimacha tribal officer was pronounced dead at the scene
of the shootings in Charenton, while two St. Mary Parish sheriff's deputies
were critically wounded and taken to local hospitals, said Louisiana State
Police Trooper Stephen Hammons.
Hammons said the officers were responding to a report of an
armed man walking down a road near the Cypress Bayou Casino when Wilbert
Thibodeaux, 48, of Charenton allegedly shot them.
"Thibodeaux fired at the Chitimacha officer, fatally
wounding him," state police said in a news release. "As two St. Mary
deputies, who were in the same car, arrived at the scene Thibodeaux fired
multiple shots hitting the deputies. During the encounter, Thibodeaux was
shot."
AP Photo: Louisiana State Police. Louisiana officers shot:
Wilbert Thibodeaux was arrested by police in the fatal shooting of a police
officer and wounding of two sheriff's deputies. IMAGE
Investigators found the burned remains of a man after
extinguishing a fire at a mobile home that Thibodeaux is suspected of setting
before the officers confronted him, Hammons said.
Police identified the deceased man in the mobile home as
Eddie Lyons, 78, of Charenton. "Detectives suspect Lyons was shot by
Thibodeaux before the fire," state police said in a news release.
Thibodeaux was treated at a hospital for a gunshot wound
that wasn't considered life-threatening and released, according to Hammons, who
said investigators were questioning him Saturday evening. Charges against him
are pending.
The state Fire Marshal's office is investigating the fire.
"Today is a difficult day for our partners in St. Mary
Parish," Col. Mike Edmonson, the State Police superintendent, said in a
statement. "My thoughts and prayers are with the deputies and the
officer's families tonight. I know the coming days and weeks will be difficult
ones for the men and women of the Chitimacha Police Department and the St. Mary
Parish Sheriff's Office. We will assist their agencies in any way we can during
these trying times."
The casino is run by the Chitimacha Tribe of Louisiana and
is less than a quarter-mile from the scene of the shootings. Hammons said the
shootings occurred near but not on tribal land.
"Everybody is just in shock. It's small-town
America," said Jacqueline Junca, the tribe's secretary and treasurer.
Police didn't immediately release the names of the officers.
Authorities said they will do so at a Monday news conference.
Tribe councilman Toby Darden said the slain officer was
married and had two grown children, but he declined to give his name.
"He's a real great guy. Extremely dedicated to his job.
Very brave," Darden said.
He was one of seven full-time officers who patrol a 260-acre
reservation that has roughly 150 homes, a grocery store, a small school and
government offices.
"Everybody knows the officers personally," Darden
said. "It's devastating."
Junca said the tribe has around 1,200 members, roughly half
of whom live on the reservation.
Access to and from the casino was restricted for roughly 90
minutes as a precautionary measure while police responded to the shooting, said
casino spokeswoman Nancy Herrington. Charenton is located about 45 miles
southeast of Lafayette.
"We are very much in business and have been,"
Herrington said later Saturday. "We have events tonight. All of those are
taking place."
A spokeswoman for the sheriff's office and a tribal police
dispatcher referred questions about the shootings to the State Police.
"We've got a lot of unanswered questions," State
Police Capt. Doug Cain said.
One of the injured deputies was taken to a hospital in New
Orleans and the other was taken to a Lafayette hospital. Both were listed in
critical but stable condition Saturday evening, Hammons said.