NorthwestApril 6, 2010

Maurice Clemmons had told people he would kill more police

George Tibbits of the Associated Press
Officer testifies about death of cop killer
Officer testifies about death of cop killer

SEATTLE - A Seattle policeman testified Monday that in scant seconds and at barely more than arm's length, he recognized the man who had killed four police officers and sworn to do the same to anyone who tried to arrest him.

In a calm, even voice, Officer Benjamin L. Kelly told a six-member inquest jury about how he was alone in his patrol car when Maurice Clemmons approached him on a dark south Seattle street early on Dec. 1. The confrontation ended with Kelly killing the man who had been sought in a frantic manhunt since ambushing the Lakewood officers two days earlier at a coffee shop south of Tacoma.

"I thought I could be dead in a matter of seconds," Kelly said.

Kelly said he and his fellow officers were warned that Clemmons was likely in the Seattle area, was armed and wounded, and had told relatives and acquaintances he would kill more police and would not be taken alive.

Kelly, 39, a five-year Seattle police veteran, readily and assertively answered questions from attorneys in his first public account of Clemmons' death.

He said he stopped to check on a stolen vehicle that had been left with its engine running and hood up. As he radioed in a report, a man in a hooded sweat shirt walked into the street behind the squad car and headed toward the driver's side.

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Kelly said he stepped out of the squad car as the man approached and quickly recognized Clemmons by his size and a prominent mole on his cheek.

When Clemmons was about 4 feet away, Kelly pulled out his service pistol and yelled at the man to show his hands. But Clemmons turned from him and reached for his waist, so Kelly said he fired seven shots, wounding Clemmons.

The confrontation was over in just a few seconds, Kelly said, with Clemmons sprinting to a high hedge at a nearby house. Kelly said he tried three times without success to radio for help, then grabbed his shotgun from the squad car, desperately looking for where Clemmons might be hiding.

"I knew that my initial rounds had hit him, and he was hit critically," Kelly said. On the fourth try, his call finally went through, and within minutes backup police cars arrived.

After cautiously approaching the hedge, officers found Clemmons face-down but moving, badly wounded by Kelly's gunfire. Officer Daina Boggs, who helped arrest Clemmons, said she found in his sweat shirt pocket the Glock Model 22 service pistol that had been taken from one of the dead Lakewood officers. Clemmons died a short time later.

The inquest is expected to wrap up today.

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