Crime & Safety

Officer Killed Was DC Native: Baltimore Police

The homicide detective killed in the line of duty was an 18-year veteran who leaves behind a wife and children.

BALTIMORE, MD — A Baltimore homicide detective who died after he was shot in the head Wednesday was born and raised in Washington, D.C. Detective Sean Suiter, 43, was in west Baltimore while investigating a 2016 murder when he suffered a single gunshot wound, according to Baltimore Police Commissioner Kevin Davis. Suiter of Pennsylvania, was a former Navy officer who leaves behind a wife and five children.

The shooting occurred in the area of Bennett Place before 5 p.m. on Wednesday while Suiter and another homicide detective were following up on an investigation. Suiter saw a man "engaged in suspicious behaviors," Davis said.

He got out of his car and "went to engage our suspect in conversation" when a confrontation ensued and he suffered a single gunshot wound to the head, Davis said. At the time of the shooting, Suiter was dressed as all homicide detectives are, in a "full suit, tie, badge displayed on his waistband," Davis said.

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The police commissioner said the shooter may have been wounded. "We're obviously searching emergency rooms, doctor's offices [for] anyone who has an unexplained injury...anything can help," Davis said, asking the public to submit tips that could lead to the killer.

Suiter was taken to the University of Maryland Shock Trauma Center. Another homicide detective who was with him in the vicinity came to his aid immediately and got him to shock trauma, Davis said.

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Suiter died around noon on Thursday, according to officials.

Officials said Suiter and his wife, Nicole, lived in Conewago Township, Pennsylvania, with their five children: Sean, Zaria, Marquis, Chris and Demyra, reports Heavy.com. Their ages range from 14 to 24.

The suspect is at large, and officers are searching the area. Dozens of police cadets canvassed the vicinity of the shooting on Thursday morning.

"The callous murder of our brother and friend, Detective Sean Suiter, has broken our hearts," the Baltimore FOP President Gene Ryan said in a statement. "We grieve for his loss, and for the pain and suffering that will be endured by his family and friends. Rest assured, however, that this has not broken our collective spirit and we will continue to do the work that Sean loved, and do it with the same integrity and commitment that he exemplified."

There is a reward of $69,000 offered for information leading to the arrest of the shooting suspect. The DEA has partnered with Baltimore Police and the FBI in offering the reward, along with Metro Crime Stoppers. People may text tips to 443-902-4824 or call police at 410-396-2100.

This is the second police officer to be shot in west Baltimore in as many weeks. An off-duty Metropolitan Police Department sergeant was killed in a shooting in Baltimore earlier this month; Sgt. Tony Anthony Mason Jr., 40, was shot while sitting in a car Nov. 4.

Photo of Detective Sean Suiter by Baltimore Police Department, courtesy of Officer Down Memorial Page.

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