Missing Texas A&M reporter Courtney Roland found in Houston, appears unharmed
January 9, 2018 by admin
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Houston police say they have located sports reporter Courtney Roland after authorities had found a Jeep belonging to the 29-year-old Texas woman.
Time
Houston Police officers said in a press conference Monday afternoon that they believe sports reporter Courtney Roland, who went missing over the weekend, was confused due to a reaction to medication.
Police said Roland, who covers Texas AM for Rivals.com, went missing Saturday night into Sunday morning and a missing-person report was filed Sunday. Roland was discovered Monday morning by a citizen who saw her walking under an overpass toward a Chick-fil-A, according to police.
Though Roland, 29, had texted her roommate about a suspicious man in a blue truck who followed her home Saturday, according to the local NBC affiliate, police said they do not suspect any “foul play.”
“There’s no evidence to indicate that she was assaulted at this time,” officer Mark Lentini told reporters. “Now a more thorough investigation may reveal something different, but at this time, we do not believe anything criminal occurred to her.”
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USA TODAY Sports’ George Schroeder recaps the coaching moves heading into the 2018 season.
USA TODAY Sports
Roland was taken to a local hospital for routine evaluation and was there with friends and family as of early Monday afternoon, according to police. Police said she had some “bumps and bruises,” didn’t remember everything that transpired in recent days and was still having some issues with her memory.
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Though she went missing Saturday night after attending a football camp, video cameras captured Roland walking alone in a local shopping mall Sunday afternoon, police said. Officer Manny Cruz told reporters they believe she was trying to locate her phone using her iPad. The phone was found in her car, according to police.
“I think in her state of confusion, I think she kind of lost track of time and her awareness,” Cruz said. “I don’t think that she was aware that she was being looked at as a missing person. That makes it very hard for us to find somebody, when (they) don’t actually know they are missing as reported.”
Contact Tom Schad at tschad@usatoday.com or on Twitter @Tom_Schad.
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Massive manhunt underway after Pierce County deputy is fatally shot responding to 911 call
January 9, 2018 by admin
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A man suspected in the fatal shooting of Pierce County sheriff’s Deputy Daniel McCartney was sitting in jail as officers were mounting a massive manhunt Monday in the Frederickson area.
The 32-year-old suspect was taken into custody not far from where McCartney was killed in a shootout shortly after responding to a 911 call late Sunday night. A suspect was killed in the shootout, but deputies believed a second person was involved.
An “alert” Washington State Patrol trooper working near the scene of the shooting stopped a person just after 8 a.m. Monday, sheriff’s spokesman Ed Troyer said. But the man did not match the initial description of the suspect and gave the trooper a false name.
The man was initially detained for obstruction, but was later booked into the Pierce County Jail for felony warrants out of Shelton, Troyer said.
Meanwhile, detectives at the scene of McCartney’s shooting received updated witness reports on the second suspect’s description and found that it matched the 32-year-old man already in custody, Troyer said.
“Our detectives spent the whole day tying evidence to him to identify him as the second suspect,” Troyer told reporters Monday afternoon.
The suspect was booked on a first-degree-murder charge and is expected to make his first court appearance Tuesday, he said. The Seattle Times is not naming the man because he has not been charged or appeared before a judge.
No further details on the suspect were released Monday.

McCartney, 34, of Yelm, died at St. Joseph Medical Center in Tacoma just after 2 a.m. The married Navy veteran and father of three boys ages 4, 6 and 9 had been a Pierce County deputy for three years.
He was a “good, solid, stalwart man,” Sheriff Paul Pastor said.
“During the 911 call, dispatchers could hear screaming and a scuffle taking place,” the Sheriff’s Office reported.
McCartney arrived on the scene and chased a suspect on foot. During the chase, shots were fired.
Troyer said that detectives believe McCartney fired shots during the fatal encounter.
“We believe our deputy did fire shots and that there was a gunbattle,” Troyer said, adding that investigators won’t know for sure until ballistics tests are done.
A handgun was recovered at the scene, and Troyer said investigators believe preliminarily that it may have been the gun used to “shoot our deputy.” He said a second weapon was recovered after the arrest of the second suspect.
The wounded deputy was found near the dead suspect’s body, about a block from the home on 200th Street East.
McCartney was rushed into surgery at St. Joseph Medical Center, but his wounds were “too catastrophic” to survive, Troyer said.
Troyer said the dead suspect and the man in jail have felony criminal records and would have been prohibited from possessing firearms. Pierce County detectives were working with agents from the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives to determine where the guns came from.
No further details on the deceased suspect were available, Troyer said, as the Pierce County medical examiner has yet to identify him.
Before joining the Pierce County Sheriff’s Department, McCartney served as a Hoquiam police officer for four years and as a detention officer at the Grays Harbor Juvenile Facility. He was deployed to Afghanistan while in the Navy.
“Daniel was the kind of person that if you called 911, you would want him to show up at your house,” friend Shon Malone told The (Tacoma) News Tribune. “If you had a problem, if you were in a crisis, you would want him there to handle that.”
Donation to McCartney’s family can be made through tpcrimestoppers.com by using PayPal, or visiting any TAPCO Credit Union location, the Sheriff’s Department said.
A procession bearing the slain officer’s body from the Pierce County Medical Examiner’s Office in Tacoma to Mountain View Memorial in Lakewood is tentatively scheduled for 1 p.m. Tuesday, the Sheriff’s Office said. Officials will confirm the schedule Tuesday morning.
McCartney is the first Seattle-area law-enforcement officer to be killed in the line of duty since Tacoma police Officer Reginald “Jake” Gutierrez, 45, was fatally shot on Nov. 30, 2016, while responding to a domestic-violence call. The gunman was killed the next day, after an 11-hour standoff.
Troyer said at a news briefing Monday morning that the deputy was following protocol when he responded within six minutes to the report of the home invasion at a residence to which police had been called multiple times before.


















Troyer said McCartney’s “bravery showed” when he ran after the suspects.
“That’s why guys sign up” to be deputies, he said. “To go after the bad guys.”
Pastor, the sheriff, said in an interview with KING 5 that sheriff’s deputies face a situation in which personnel are “thinly stretched” throughout the county.
“He ran toward trouble; he ran to protect somebody whose house was being actively broken into,” Pastor said. “That’s the kind of heart, that’s the kind of spirit, that’s the kind of strength these people show.”
Some roads in the area were closed for hours after the shooting as police searched for the suspect. Bethel School District canceled all classes Monday out of “an abundance of caution,” it reported on its Facebook page.
Neighbors described the neighborhood as generally quiet and safe, aside from a few car prowls in the past year, said Marcia Thompson, who was baby-sitting her grandchildren in her daughter’s house overlooking the shooting scene.
She also expressed concern for her daughter’s neighbors, whose gray mobile home was broken into: “They’ve got to be freaking out. It makes you so much more aware of your surroundings,” Thompson said.
Soobie Yoo, a Korean interpreter who lives less than two blocks north of where the shooting took place, said the news “came as such a shock.”
Yoo didn’t hear gunfire but was awakened by flashing police lights.
“It’s so horrible,” she said. “This is so surreal. There’s a lot of kids living in this neighborhood.”
Seattle Times staff reporter Jessica Lee contributed to this story.