electra1978
09-30-2007, 01:00
Officer Dan Talbot was pronounced at 9:55 pm EST. My thoughts and condolences go out to his fiance, family, and fellow officers.
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Revere officer shot in head
By O’Ryan Johnson | Sunday, September 30, 2007 | http://www.bostonherald.com | Local Coverage
A five-year veteran of the Revere police department was shot once in the head in a parking lot behind the high school early yesterday morning and was rushed to Massachusetts General Hospital, where he is in “grave condition,” said Suffolk District Attorney Dan Conley.
Officer Daniel Talbot, 30, was surrounded by others when the shooting happened, and sources said at least two of those people were his fellow police officers.
Conley refused to comment about who was near Talbot when the shooting happened, saying investigators knew who they are.
He said the “state police unit from headquarters that investigates police-involved shootings” is also a part of the investigation. The department defines a police-involved shooting as one where a police officer discharges his or her service weapon. Conley refused to elaborate. He said no one is in custody.
State police canvassed the neighborhood of the shooting around 4 a.m. A state police helicopter hovered over the scene for hours.
Talbot was described as a courageous, hard-working cop who loved his job.
“Dan is a very thorough, hard-working police officer. He comes to work, does his job,” said Revere Police Chief Terrance Reardon. “He’s got a lot of guts, as I said. Our hearts go out to him and his family.”
According to a source, Talbot and two other officers spent the hours before the shooting at an Acton gun range, where they must qualify once a year under department rules.
When they returned from the gun range, the trio dined at Margaritas, a Mexican bar and grill in Revere, where a manager confirmed the visit. The manager said he knew Talbot from previous trips to the bar, and knew at least one of the men with him was a police officer.
The manager said he did not know what time Talbot’s party left.
Sources said at some point after they visited the bar, Talbot, two other officers and possibly others, traveled to the rear of Revere High School.
It was in the parking lot there, about 1:30 a.m., that gunshots were fired and Talbot went down, Conley said.
Neighbors in the area said they heard between four and six gunshots. All of them said they heard the same staccato pattern: a “pop” followed by a pause, then three to five shots fired rapidly.
Talbot, a 1995 graduate of Revere High School, was assigned to the gang squad and also worked as a patrol officer, Conley said. A classmate said he was raised in Revere by his grandmother.
Talbot’s former Revere landlord was stunned to hear the news that he was shot, saying the officer was neat and quiet, and a nice man who was able to get through to young people. She said he was recently engaged, and took his fiancee on a cruise to pop the question.
“Knowing him, he would be one to talk kids out of anything,” said Aloise Stewart of Revere. “He was the kind of guy you felt proud being around. You felt safe. I told him when he moved in that I was worried about him having a gun and he said, ‘I assure you it’s locked up at all times.’ ”
ojohnson@bostonherald.com
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Revere officer shot in head
By O’Ryan Johnson | Sunday, September 30, 2007 | http://www.bostonherald.com | Local Coverage
A five-year veteran of the Revere police department was shot once in the head in a parking lot behind the high school early yesterday morning and was rushed to Massachusetts General Hospital, where he is in “grave condition,” said Suffolk District Attorney Dan Conley.
Officer Daniel Talbot, 30, was surrounded by others when the shooting happened, and sources said at least two of those people were his fellow police officers.
Conley refused to comment about who was near Talbot when the shooting happened, saying investigators knew who they are.
He said the “state police unit from headquarters that investigates police-involved shootings” is also a part of the investigation. The department defines a police-involved shooting as one where a police officer discharges his or her service weapon. Conley refused to elaborate. He said no one is in custody.
State police canvassed the neighborhood of the shooting around 4 a.m. A state police helicopter hovered over the scene for hours.
Talbot was described as a courageous, hard-working cop who loved his job.
“Dan is a very thorough, hard-working police officer. He comes to work, does his job,” said Revere Police Chief Terrance Reardon. “He’s got a lot of guts, as I said. Our hearts go out to him and his family.”
According to a source, Talbot and two other officers spent the hours before the shooting at an Acton gun range, where they must qualify once a year under department rules.
When they returned from the gun range, the trio dined at Margaritas, a Mexican bar and grill in Revere, where a manager confirmed the visit. The manager said he knew Talbot from previous trips to the bar, and knew at least one of the men with him was a police officer.
The manager said he did not know what time Talbot’s party left.
Sources said at some point after they visited the bar, Talbot, two other officers and possibly others, traveled to the rear of Revere High School.
It was in the parking lot there, about 1:30 a.m., that gunshots were fired and Talbot went down, Conley said.
Neighbors in the area said they heard between four and six gunshots. All of them said they heard the same staccato pattern: a “pop” followed by a pause, then three to five shots fired rapidly.
Talbot, a 1995 graduate of Revere High School, was assigned to the gang squad and also worked as a patrol officer, Conley said. A classmate said he was raised in Revere by his grandmother.
Talbot’s former Revere landlord was stunned to hear the news that he was shot, saying the officer was neat and quiet, and a nice man who was able to get through to young people. She said he was recently engaged, and took his fiancee on a cruise to pop the question.
“Knowing him, he would be one to talk kids out of anything,” said Aloise Stewart of Revere. “He was the kind of guy you felt proud being around. You felt safe. I told him when he moved in that I was worried about him having a gun and he said, ‘I assure you it’s locked up at all times.’ ”
ojohnson@bostonherald.com