Inaccurate description of shooting suspect led to unnecessary manhunt
Jan 9, 2018, 2:54 PM | Updated: 4:51 pm
(Joshua Bessex/The News Tribune via AP)
After Pierce County Deputy Daniel McCartney was shot and killed on Sunday night, police spent hours searching the area for the shooting suspect. It turns out, however, that the person they were looking for was already in custody.
Frank William Pawul, 32, was arrested just 10 blocks from the crime scene around 8:00 a.m. Monday morning, The News Tribune reported. At the time, he had three unrelated active warrants for his arrest. Pawul is being held without bail until Thursday, when formal charges of first degree murder are expected, KIRO 7 reports.
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“He had been arrested and then gave a false name to officers,” KIRO Radio’s Mike Lewis said on the Tom and Curley Show on Tuesday. “Officers initially had received an inaccurate description of him, so they were looking literally for someone who didn’t look like this guy.”
It was the initial inaccurate description that led investigators astray throughout the day-long manhunt. Early witness details described the shooting suspect simply as “a black male.”
UPDATE – We have determined that 2 suspects were involved in the incident – 1 white male, 1 black male. White male suspect found deceased at the scene, black male suspect remains unidentified and on the loose. Search ongoing in area. pic.twitter.com/Tc7YrmZCny
— Pierce Co Sheriff (@PierceSheriff) January 8, 2018
Later, the description changed to more accurately depict the person involved:
Updated suspect description in murder of #PCSD deputy: Unidentified male, mixed race or white, tall, thin, curly dark hair in ponytail, large pointy nose, pock marks on right side of face; wearing dark hooded sweatshirt, black beanie. Call in tips to 855-798-8477.
— Pierce Co Sheriff (@PierceSheriff) January 8, 2018
As police investigated Pawul, they realized his likely connection to Sunday night’s shooting and called off the search. Had early details been correct, a manhunt could have been avoided.
But the situation on Monday wasn’t that unusual, Lewis said.
“It’s not always an immediate, sizable manhunt for your average crime,” Lewis said. “If you talk to investigators, you’ll find that they get poor descriptions all the time. Sometimes it’s not intentionally poor. Sometimes people literally don’t remember or they don’t remember what their eyes actually saw.”
“This is why good detectives and investigators ask multiple people,” he added.
McCartney’s body was escorted from the medical examiner’s office in Tacoma to Mountain View Memorial Park in Lakewood.