Witnesses: Slain Arkansas officer saved sergeant
TRUMANN, AK
Two of the people who were in a car pulled over by Officer
Jonathan Schmidt said the policeman died a hero -- saving the life
of Sgt. Corey Overstreet before taking on suspect Jerry Lard in a
late-night gun battle.
"So many shots you can't even count," said April Swanner, 30,
a passenger in the car and a high school classmate of the fallen
officer.
Investigators identified Lard, 37, of Trumann, as the gunman and
said he was under police guard at a hospital recovering from
unspecified wounds. Officers would not release his condition, nor
say where he was being treated. Formal charges hadn't been filed
late Wednesday.
Authorities said Schmidt was patrolling the Delta community of
some 7,000 Tuesday night and pulled over Keith Elumbaugh, 33, of
Trumann, after discovering through a license plate check that the
car's insurance wasn't up to date. Overstreet arrived a few minutes
later.
Elumbaugh told the AP that, during the traffic stop, he was
handcuffed and told he was being held for failing to appear on a
misdemeanor warrant. The accusation: he violated the town's leash
law with his ex-girlfriend's dog, a Jack Russell terrier and
Chihuahua mix named Rascal.
Elumbaugh said Schmidt was smiling and joking with the people in
the car -- after mispronouncing Elumbaugh's name.
According to Elumbaugh, when Schmidt opened the rear passenger
door where Lard was sitting, Lard lunged at him and started
shooting. Schmidt, hit in the neck by a bullet, turned away and
pushed Overstreet toward safety.
Once Overstreet was behind Schmidt's police car, Schmidt turned
back toward Lard and began to return fire.
While he was shooting, Elumbaugh said, Lard was cursing Schmidt,
saying "Die, (expletive)!"
"Please don't shoot me. Please don't shoot me," Schmidt cried
out, Elumbaugh said.
In a pair of interviews with the AP, Elumbaugh said Lard, whom
he characterized as a friend, showed up at his home earlier Tuesday
night and asked for a ride home. He said he didn't know where Lard
had been and wouldn't say whether he believed Lard was intoxicated
or high or held any animosity toward police officers.
"I'm not going to comment on that," he said.
Swanner, who was in the front seat of the car, said that despite
being shot Schmidt was able to keep firing as he fell to the
ground, and Elumbaugh described how he "went over to pick (the
other officer) up and put him behind the car, (and) put himself in
the line of fire." A friend of Lard's was in the rear driver's
side seat.
Both Elumbaugh and Swanner said they didn't know Lard was armed
until the shooting started.
"I was right in the middle of the gunfire," Elumbaugh said.
"I had to run away, run out of the line of fire."
"All I saw was everybody run. I couldn't move. I went deaf
'cause the gunshot was right here," Swanner said, putting a hand
to one of her ears.
Former and current officers commiserated Wednesday at the
15-officer Trumann police station, describing Schmidt as a
dedicated father and committed officer who was always prepared.
Jonathan Skaggs, a former Trumann police officer who recommended
Schmidt for the job, said his friend left a higher paying job at a
steel mill to join the police force in 2007 in the city where he
was raised.
"He said he just wanted to do his part to give back to
Trumann," Skaggs said.
Arkansas Attorney General Dustin McDaniel visited the town to
recognize Schmidt and his loved ones.
"He is absolutely a hero," McDaniel said. "That family has
given a great sacrifice to the people of Arkansas. They lost a
father, husband, a son. These officers lost a brother to protecting
the people of this community."
Schmidt worked as a night patrolman so he could spend days with
his three children, Skaggs said. Schmidt had a 12-year-old daughter
and sons ages 10 and 18 months.
Schmidt recently received a commendation for saving an infant's
life by giving the child mouth-to-mouth resuscitation.
"I'd put Jonathan Schmidt up against almost any cop in the
state," Skaggs said.
Swanner expressed a similar sentiment.
"Jonathan was a brave man," Swanner said.