Police shot dead in Utah on domestic violence call out

Two US police officers who responded to an internal discomfort in Utah were killed.
Officers were defined as 56-year-old sergeant Lee Sorensen and civil servant Eric Estrada from the 31-year-old Tremonton-Garland Police Department.
A deputy sheriff and a police dog were shot and injured when they came to help in a neighborhood in Tremonton on Sunday night. Police, Box Elder County deputy was released from the hospital on Monday and the dog was taken to hospital in a fair state, he said.
“These civil servants are absolutely heroes,” said Chad Reyes, the police chief at neighboring Brigham City, at a press conference on Monday.
When the police responded to calls for internal discomfort, he said, “We don’t really know what we’re in.” “And they are one of the most dangerous events we can be sent.”
The police received more than one 911 suspension from a house in the city. In a news bulletin, a single officer from the Tremonton-Garland Police Department came before, and when the man came out with a gun, he was talking to someone at home.
“The male opened fire on the officer, hit the officer and killed.” He said.
A second officer from the department was “fired by the same male suspect” and was killed.
Once the officers convinced the man to leave his gun after the officers were shot, the police said.
Utah Governor Spencer Cox described the one as “a terrible and tragic night.” Online, “these brave law enforcement officers” mourned the loss of the state joined the state and ordered the flies on half a pole.
The suspect was arrested on charges of aggravated murder.
Sorensen had served as a law enforcement force for 17 years and received more than one honor for the society service. He had recently been promoted to the Çavuş and would swear to his new role on Friday.
Estrada, before joining the Tremonton-Garland Police Department, he worked as a patrol officer in the Box Elder County. His colleagues described him as a special father and husband who likes to be in the patrol in order to interact with people in the community.
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