Latest: Hundreds gather for vigil honoring slain officer
FARGO, N.D. (AP) — The latest on the fatal shooting of a police officer during a standoff at a home in Fargo, North Dakota (all times local):
About 200 people have gathered in Fargo for a vigil to honor a city police officer fatally shot in the line of duty.
Police officials said 33-year-old Officer Jason Moszer died hours earlier of a single gunshot wound.
The man suspected of fatally shooting a Fargo police officer was sent to prison for a 1988 shooting that killed a man.
Forty-nine-year-old Marcus Schumacher is accused of shooting Officer Jason Moszer after the six-year veteran of the force answered a call Wednesday evening about a domestic disturbance.
Court records show Schumacher was sentenced in 1989 on charges of manslaughter and reckless endangerment for the death in downtown Grand Forks of 17-year-old Maynard Clauthier.
Police officials say 33-year-old Officer Jason Moszer died at 12:45 p.m. Thursday from a single gunshot wound.
Police say a suspect in the shooting of a North Dakota police officer has been found shot to death in the home where he barricaded himself for about 11 hours.
Police said the standoff suspect fired multiple rounds and Officer Jason Moszer was injured.
Police say a man suspected of shooting a Fargo police officer who is not expected to survive might also have suffered a gunshot wound during the ongoing standoff.
Police in North Dakota say an officer has been shot amid a standoff with a domestic violence suspect in Fargo and is not expected to survive.
Authorities say a suspect in a domestic dispute is barricaded inside a home in north Fargo and has been firing shots amid a standoff with officers.
Multiple law enforcement agencies responded Wednesday night, and dozens of officers set up a perimeter.
Fargo Deputy Police Chief Joe Anderson says the incident began around 7 p.m. when a caller told dispatchers his father had possibly fired a gun at his mother.