UPDATE: Injured Dallas Police officer from El Paso; remains in critical condition
A Dallas police officer died Wednesday after a shooting that wounded another officer and an employee at a home improvement store, the city’s mayor said.
Mayor Mike Rawlings was presiding over a city council meeting when he announced the death of Rogelio Santander, a member of the police force for three years. Santander, officer Crystal Almeida and a loss-prevention officer for Home Depot were shot Tuesday by a man identified by police as 29-year-old Armando Luis Juarez.
ABC-7’s sister station WFAA is reporting officer Almeida is from El Paso.
A Facebook page for “Crystal Almeida” shows she is from El Paso, and lives in Dallas.
A representative with the El Paso Police Department Wives group tells ABC-7 one of the police wives used to work with Almeida, and confirms she’s from El Paso.
A spokesman for SISD tells ABC-7 Alemida was a 2010 graduate from Americas High School.
The two officers and the store loss-prevention officer underwent surgery for their injuries after the shooting in the north of the city, Dallas Police Chief U. Renee Hall said late Tuesday.
Almeida and the loss-prevention officer, who hasn’t been identified, were in critical condition Wednesday.
Police arrested Juarez following a high-speed car chase. He’s being held at the Dallas County jail on charges of aggravated assault on a public servant and felony theft. He was taken into custody shortly before 10 p.m.
“We got our man,” Rawlings said at a late-night news conference at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital Dallas.
But relatives of Juarez said they couldn’t believe he would be involved in such a violent episode.
“There’s no way my son could’ve done this,” Ruben Juarez told The Dallas Morning News, adding that he didn’t think his son owned any guns.
Armando Juarez’s grandmother, Janie Longoria, told reporters Tuesday that her grandson is a “sweet, lovable person,” but that his friends are a bad influence.
“And I told him to stay away from those people,” she said.
Police were called to the store to help an off-duty police officer to remove Juarez from the store. Police have not said if he was suspected of shoplifting or why he was being ejected from store. Juarez opened fire as he was being escorted from the store and made his escape. Several law enforcement agencies were involved in the pursuit that led to his eventual arrest.
Rawlings said late Tuesday that he remains “upset at the lack of respect for our police in this city and in our country.”
In 2016, four Dallas police officers and a transit officer were shot dead by a sniper in an ambush that came toward the end of a peaceful protest over the police killings of black men in other cities.
Juarez was arrested in January on a charge of unlawful use of a motor vehicle after authorities say he was found in a stolen vehicle. He also pleaded guilty to a drug-possession charge.
The Assist the Officer Foundation of Dallas has set up a donation fund for those wanting to help.
The Associated Press contributed to this article