Memphis officer slain; 1 sought

29-year-old faces murder charge in traffic-stop shooting

Memphis police canvass an area Sunday near where police officer Sean Bolton was fatally shot during a traffic stop Saturday night in Memphis.
Memphis police canvass an area Sunday near where police officer Sean Bolton was fatally shot during a traffic stop Saturday night in Memphis.

MEMPHIS --Tennessee police officials on Sunday identified a suspect in the fatal shooting of a Memphis police officer, and a search for the man is underway.

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The Commercial Appeal/AP

A Memphis police officer looks out from an apartment balcony Sunday after a standoff near the area where officer Sean Bolton was fatally shot Saturday in Memphis.

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Officer Sean Bolton

Tremaine Wilbourn, 29, faces a first-degree murder charge in the death of officer Sean Bolton, 33, on Saturday night, Memphis Police Director Toney Armstrong said at a news conference.

Armstrong said Wilbourn was a passenger in a 2002 Mercedes Benz that was parked illegally in a southeast Memphis neighborhood Saturday night. Armstrong said Bolton saw the car and shined his squad car's spotlight on the vehicle.

Bolton then got out of his car and walked toward the Mercedes, Armstrong said. Wilbourn then got out of the Mercedes, confronted Bolton, and they got into a physical struggle, Armstrong said.

Wilbourn then took out a gun and fired it, striking Bolton multiple times, Armstrong said. The officer died at a hospital.

Wilbourn and the driver then ran away, Armstrong said. The driver later surrendered to police, and police described him as a person of interest in the case before he was released without being charged.

Armstrong said Bolton interrupted a drug deal in progress. Officers found about 1.7 grams of marijuana inside the car, which likely would have resulted in a misdemeanor citation and a fine for Wilbourn, Armstrong said.

Bolton was a former U.S. Marine and served a tour of duty in Iraq, police said.

Police officers wearing protective vests descended on an apartment complex in southeast Memphis on Sunday, about 3 miles from the scene of the shooting. An armored truck and a mobile command center were among the police vehicles there.

Officers could be seen going in and out of a sliding door and onto a balcony on the second floor of the two-story building.

Bolton is the third Memphis officer to be fatally shot in slightly more than four years. Officer Tim Warren was killed while responding to a shooting at a downtown Memphis hotel in July 2011. In December 2012, officer Martoiya Lang was killed while serving a warrant.

Memphis Mayor A.C. Wharton Jr. said Bolton's death "speaks volumes about the inherent danger of police work" and asked others to "pray for the family and pray for our city." During past police shootings, both Wharton and Armstrong have said too many violent criminals are out on the street and have easy access to guns.

"The men and women in blue have certain rules of engagement that they have to follow, but at any given minute in a 24-hour day, they're dealing with folks who have no rules of engagement," Wharton said.

A Section on 08/03/2015

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