
A Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department sergeant was killed Monday in a patrol car crash in Compton that may have occurred because he suffered a “medical emergency.”
The victim had just driven out of the Compton station parking lot to join a stolen car chase when his vehicle inexplicably crashed into a fence. The chase that he had planned to join had just been terminated out of safety precautions due to the rain.
The crash occurred about 5:20 a.m. at Myrrh Street and Willowbrook Avenue. Sgt. Al Lopez, 47, a 26-year veteran of the department, died at St. Francis Medical Center, according to the sheriff’s department.
Lopez, who had transferred to the sheriff’s Compton Station about a year ago, is survived by a wife and two adult children.
“It is a tremendous loss to all of us,” Sheriff Jim McDonnell told reporters gathered outside the hospital. “It looks like it may have been a medical emergency.”
Lopez had gotten into his patrol car to assist other deputies who were involved in a pursuit of a stolen car, McDonnell said. However, the pursuit was called off about the time that the sergeant was pulling out of the parking lot of the Compton Station, McDonnell said.
A short time later, about 100 yards away, the patrol car crashed into a wrought-iron fence, McDonnell said. The chase had been called off for safety reasons, in part because of the rainy weather, the sheriff said.
The loss was another blow for a department still reeling from the Oct. 5 on-duty killing of Lancaster Station Sgt. Steve Owen.
“Mourning the loss of one fallen brother is hard enough,” said Los Angeles County Professional Peace Officers Association President Brian Moriguchi. “But two in the span of three weeks seems unbearable.
This is when the department and this union truly feels like a close- knit family. We’ll grieve together but we’ll also stand firmly for those left behind …,” he said. “Our thoughts and prayers are with the Lopez family, including his wife and children, along with many colleagues and friends on the department.”
The Association for Los Angeles Deputy Sheriffs also issued a statement mourning Lopez’s death.
“All of our ALADS members will be grieving the loss with Sergeant Lopez’s family members, friends, and fellow deputies. We would ask everyone to keep the men and women in law enforcement in your thoughts and prayers.”
—City News Service
