i still got movement at the trailer as well. just keep looking out the window. cameraman don hatcher from wdtn in dayton finds a hiding place behind a tree to record the scene as it unfolds. it was a good spot. i could see everything. and i stayed there and nobody knew i was there. the cops couldn t see me and hopefully the guy with the gun couldn t see me either. sheriff kelly orders the shooter to surrender as officers set up a perimeter. but the gunman has a big advantage. deputy hopper is lying only feet from his trailer and it s impossible for the police to move in without drawing fire. we wanted to get suzanne out, but i did not want to have another person sacrifice their life to get her out. sergeant christopher clark who also knows the injured
hopper was a model officer and an active presence in the community. the outpouring of grief over her death is overwhelming. hundreds of squad cars from all over ohio join the procession to her funeral as local residents line the streets. the community came together. there were little children standing in the cold holding flags. people had their hands on their hearts. seeing people line the streets with flags and saluting us will stick with me forever. thousands of officers attend hopper s service as messages of sympathy pour in from all over the u.s. and a dozen foreign countries. it has been unbelievable, the support, the outpouring. her legacy of service and commitment will live on. coming up, a crack shot
body of deputy suzanne hopper. she s been shot in the head. it s just a crash of emotions. disbelief, anger, to some extent hatred. patrolman blum pulls through, but the loss of hopper, one of the squad s most beloved deputies, is a crushing blow. this is the worst day in my 24 years as a sheriff of clark county. the gunman, michael ferryman, had a history of mental instability and violence. in 2001, he was involved in another shoot-out with officers in another ohio trailer park. no one was hurt, and ferryman was found not guilty by reason of insanity.
fast forward to 2011, and ferryman is living at another campground, monitored by the county, but somehow gets hold of a gun. we had no knowledge of that. and i m still upset about that. hopper was a model officer and an active presence in the community. the outpouring of grief over her death is overwhelming. hundreds of squad cars from all over ohio join the procession to her funeral as local residents line the streets. the community came together. there were little children standing in the cold holding flags. people had their hands on their hearts. seeing people line the streets with flags and saluting us will stick with me forever. thousands of officers attend hopper s service as messages of sympathy pour in from all over the u.s. and a dozen foreign countries. it has been unbelievable, the support, the outpouring. her legacy of service and
michael ferryman, a resident of the trailer park with a history of mental health problems. he s barricaded himself inside his mobile home. i still got movement at the trailer as well. just keep looking out the window. cameraman don hatcher from wdtn in dayton finds a hiding place behind a tree to record the scene as it unfolds. it was a good spot. i could see everything. and i stayed there and nobody knew i was there. the cops couldn t see me and hopefully the guy with the gun couldn t see me either. sheriff kelly orders the shooter to surrender as officers set up a perimeter. but the gunman has a big advantage. deputy hopper is lying only feet from his trailer and it s impossible for the police to move in without drawing fire. we wanted to get suzanne out,