Story Published:
Jun 28, 2006 at 10:31 PM PST
Story Updated:
Aug 31, 2006 at 7:30 AM PST
SPANAWAY, WASH. - A Washington State Patrol trooper was
wounded in a shootout with a motorist she was trying to arrest for
drunken driving early Thursday, and Pierce County sheriff's
deputies shot the driver a few miles away.
Authorities identified the 24-year-old man who was shot to death
as Jack Sonntag, nephew of state auditor Brian Sonntag.
The trooper, Kelly Kalmbach, 47, was in good condition by midday
Thursday after undergoing surgery on gunshot wounds to both legs
and her left forearm at Madigan Army Medical Center, state Trooper
Mark H. Lewis said.
"It's a tragic thing," Brian Sonntag told The Associated
Press. "We're all concerned about my brother and his family. We're
concerned about the State Patrol officer and the deputy sheriffs
who had to respond. I know what happened but no one knows why."
Pierce County Sheriff's Detective Ed Troyer said investigators
were certain that Jack Sonntag was the motorist who had fired about
a dozen rounds at the trooper from a 9 mm semiautomatic handgun,
based on the trooper's description, documents, witness accounts and
other evidence.
She was lucky to be alive, "oh yeah, oh yes," Troyer said.
Sonntag never got off a shot at sheriff's deputies, who opened
fire when he ignored warnings and drew a handgun, Troyer said. He
was pronounced dead at the scene.
Both deputies were placed on paid leave, a standard procedure in
shootings by law enforcement officers.
Troyer and Lewis told the AP that Kalmbach, a five-year veteran
of the patrol, stopped a 2000 Lincoln Town Car by a Union 76
station on Washington 7 just south of an intersection known as the
Roy "Y" outside Spanaway, about 10 miles south of Tacoma.
Following a field sobriety test, Kalmbach told the motorist to
put his hands behind his back, but before she could put him in
handcuffs "he fought his way free, ran to his car, got a gun and
started shooting," Troyer said.
Crouching behind her patrol car, which was hit by five to seven
slugs, Kalmbach fired her .40-caliber semiautomatic service weapon
as the man fled, flattening one of his tires and hitting his car
numerous times.
"She may have hit him, too," Troyer said. "We won't know that
until after the autopsy."
Kalmbach radioed twice for aid, first to request assistance in
the arrest and then after the shooting, and she remained conscious
as a woman and her son who had stopped for gasoline helped bandage
her wounds and when an ambulance arrived, Lewis said.
Less than 15 minutes later, deputies saw a man matching the
description she'd given walking in the driveway of Bethel Baptist
Church by the Bethel School District headquarters in Spanaway,
Troyer said.
Despite warnings from the deputies he "behaved aggressively,"
pulled a gun from his pants and was shot dead on the spot, Troyer
said.
Brian Sonntag said his nephew had never been arrested and
enjoyed his job as an auto mechanic. "I don't think he had any
issues," Brian Sonntag said.