From Friday's Sun
Off-duty officer shot, killed by city police
3 city officers, including one who fired gun, on administrative duties during probe
On the night of his 44th anniversary as a Baltimore
police officer, Norman Stamp drank beer at a strip club on Haven Street
with members of the motorcycle club he helped found -- a tight
fraternity called the Chosen Sons.
Shortly
after midnight, a dispute with another group led to harsh words and then
punches.
A brawl spilled out into the parking lot and drew
three uniformed police officers. Stamp, brass knuckles on his fist,
rushed out a side door. He apparently didn't hear or notice the uniformed
Officer John Torres or his orders to stop.
Torres, a
five-year veteran, felled Stamp with an electric jolt from a Taser, and
the off-duty officer pulled out his service weapon.
Torres fired twice, hitting Stamp at least once in the chest. The
65-year-old struggled to his feet and said: "I didn't know you were a cop,"
according to a person familiar with the investigation.
Stamp died at Maryland Shock Trauma Center about 1:30 a.m., leaving police
stunned at how one of their colleagues -- a person with more than
four decades of police experience -- challenged a fellow officer
and ended up fatally wounded on a grimy lot.
"The
Norm Stamp that I know would not have pulled a gun on police," said Paul
Blair, the police union president. "Maybe it was tunnel vision and he
didn't realize they were officers. It is an unbelievable way to end a career. It
is a hell of a way to end a career."
Blair defended
the officer who shot Stamp, saying: "Officer Torres did everything
by the book. That officer was devastated."
Bleary-eyed police commanders stood at a morning news conference and
concurred, saying it appeared Torres followed department policy
when he fired.
"Torres was issuing commands,"
said Police Commissioner Frederick H. Bealefeld III. "He deployed
his Taser. He followed his training; he did what he was taught to do
in terms of dealing with these types of situations."
City police officers have shot 10 people this year, killing seven.
Last year, they shot 33, killing 13.
About Stamp, the
commissioner said: "He was a mentor to some and a friend to many."
Bealefeld said one man involved in the incident broke
his leg while resisting police, and that person was arrested. Police
had not released his name Thursday.
"This is an
incredibly difficult time," Bealefeld said. "The men and women of your
Police Department will remain focused, vigilant and undaunted."
Men from the Chosen Sons, the other brotherhood that
defined Stamp's life, shed quiet tears. They put on a pot of coffee
and sat around their clubhouse, smoking cigarettes and telling
stories about the man who they said founded their organization with
other police officers and firefighters in 1969.
"He's a survivor," said Paul "Nitro" Treash, the
sergeant-of-arms of the club. "This [biker] lifestyle, it isn't for
everybody. These guys will fight and die for each other."
As Treash talked about his friend, he was frequently interrupted by phone calls.
"Norm's dead," he told a
caller. "I know, I know. They are going to try to cover this up," he
said shaking his head.
Like the police, none of the bikers could believe Stamp would pull a weapon on an officer. "That is
stuff that he has preached to us. When a cop gives an order you should
comply. We're just beside ourselves right now."
They
said that the night began with an initiation. Stamp, as a founding
member of the club, played a key role. The members, as part of a
hazing, told a new guy he had been rejected and ordered him to leave
the clubhouse.
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Copyright © 2008, The Baltimore Sun
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