A 74-year-old who won a sharpshooting decoration in Vietnam ambushed police officers coming to his South Carolina home to question his adult son about a child sexual assault, killing one and wounding six others, the sheriff investigating the case said Friday.
Frederick Hopkins was charged with murder and six counts of attempted murder Friday, Richland County Sheriff Leon Lott said. Hopkins has been in the hospital since he was taken into custody after the Wednesday afternoon shooting, but should be released and taken to jail Friday, Lott said.
Florence County investigators called Hopkins’ home and arranged to speak to his 27-year-old adopted son, Seth Hopkins, about a sex assault investigation Wednesday afternoon, Lott said, adding that they had a search warrant.
The three deputies were shot without warning as they got out of their car, he said.
Dozens of officers rushed to help, and the gunman shot four city of Florence officers. Police Sgt. Terrence Carraway was killed.
So many rounds were fired with such powerful weapons that it took up to 30 minutes to get an armored vehicle close enough to rescue the wounded officers, Florence Police Chief Allen Heidler said. The standoff lasted two hours.
Several children in the home were not harmed, authorities said.
Seth Hopkins was charged Friday with second-degree criminal sexual conduct. Authorities didn’t immediately release details about the crime. Lott said he also ended up in the hospital after the shooting but should be released Friday.
Authorities have not said whether the men have attorneys to speak on their behalf.
Frederick Hopkins’ wife, Cheryl Turner Hopkins, is an attorney and attended a hearing Friday that Solicitor Ed Clements said concerned emergency custody for children in the home. The solicitor did not provide details on the hearing and the Family Court judge sealed the case.
Cheryl Turner Hopkins told a WPDE-TV reporter outside the courtroom that she is sorry of the officers’ families and asked for prayers.
Richland County deputies are investigating the case at the request of the Florence County Sheriff’s Office.
Lott said a special FBI team that investigated the fatal shootings of five police officers in Dallas in 2016 and deaths of 59 people and wounding of hundreds more in Las Vegas last year is helping collect evidence from the crime scene at an upscale Florence subdivision.
“This is a large crime scene. This is a very large, complex puzzle that we are still filling the pieces in,” Lott said.
Two of the wounded officers have been released from the hospital. Lott said others remain in critical condition but did not provide details.
Frederick Hopkins is a Vietnam veteran and a disbarred attorney. His U.S. Army records obtained by The Associated Press show he was awarded a marksman badge with pistol bar and a sharpshooter with rifle bar decorations during 11 years of service starting in 1966.
Hopkins also was awarded the Bronze Star for his heroism defending a firebase under attack by North Vietnamese forces on May 6, 1970.
Hopkins — then a U.S. Army captain — carried medical supplies across an open area, “braving shrapnel from exploding mortar rounds,” according to the letter explaining the award. He was critically wounded when a mortar round exploded near him, the letter said.
Hopkins earned his law license after he left the military but was disbarred a few years later for mishandling money. Several Facebook posts in recent years were about guns, including celebrating his 70th birthday by repeatedly firing his M14 rifle “set up exactly like the one I used in Vietnam.”
Authorities also released the names of all the wounded officers. Florence County Deputy Arie Davis, investigator Sarah Miller and investigator Farrrah Turner were shot as they got to the home and Florence Police Officers Brian Hart, Travis Scott and Scott Williamson were wounded along with Carraway as they rushed to help.
Carraway’s funeral is scheduled for Monday at the city’s civic center.
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Associated Press researcher Monica Mathur in New York and reporters Meg Kinnard in Columbia, South Carolina, and Rebecca Santana in New Orleans contributed to this report.
You got to realize that Vietnam War veterans were not afforded the “decompression” and “Destress” periods now used for returning combatants. So many were just thrown into civilian life straight from hostile combat in Vietnam and used what they learned in the war to resolve their problems, that unfortunately is the firearms they were trained to use.
I know of one veteran who returned from combat learned that his younger brother took a present from his grandmother, a large television set and told to return it. He refused so his older Vietnam veteran brother took out his .45 pistol and shot it three times! That is how things were done in the Vietnam War so I am not surprised he used the same tactic he was trained to do and shot those cops. He could have easily picked them off with head shots so charging him with attempted murder is far fledged since he is an expert markmanship.