“This war on police officers must come to an end,” Sen. Dave Syverson wrote. | Facebook
“This war on police officers must come to an end,” Sen. Dave Syverson wrote. | Facebook
State Sen. Dave Syverson (R-Rockford) is pushing a plan that would reenact the death penalty in Illinois in cases where individuals are found guilty of killing a police officer.
“This war on police officers must come to an end,” Syverson posted on Facebook shortly after two Illinois officers were fatally wounded in separate incidents within hours of one another. “Without the rule of law you have chaos. The damage done by those leaders pushing their defund-police agenda, and putting criminals above law-abiding citizens, is being felt nationwide. We need to stand behind law-enforcement that put their lives on the line every day protecting us.”
Wayne County Sheriff's Deputy Sean Riley died on the morning on Dec. 29, when he was accosted while responding to an early morning motorist-assist call on Interstate 64. Police quickly moved to charge 40-year-old Ray Tate with the crime, adding that he is also accused of taking the officer’s vehicle which was later found abandoned on the interstate, 14News reported.
Tate has also been charged as the gunman in an earlier shooting where the male victim’s vehicle was also stolen.
Not long after news of Riley’s shooting, word came that 49-year-old Bradley Police Department Sgt. Marlene Rittmanic had been fatally wounded and her 27-year-old partner Tyler Bailey critically wounded while responding to a call of dogs barking in an unattended car in the parking lot at the Comfort Inn off of Route 50.
Authorities said officers arrived at the hotel room where the car's owner was staying, but someone from inside the room opened fire. Over the New Year’s Day holiday weekend, police in Indiana took suspects Darius Sullivan, 25, and Xandria Harris, 26, into custody in connection with the shooting.
The Kankakee County State's Attorney office has already requested that federal prosecutors pursue the death penalty against both Sullivan and Harris, with State’s Attorney Jim Rowe formally filing first-degree murder charges against both.
“I am also requesting that the United States Attorney file federal murder charges against Darius Sullivan and Xandria Harris and seek a punishment of death,” he wrote. “There is recent precedent for the United States pursuing the death penalty for the murder of a law enforcement officer (US v. Stephen Wiggins, Middle District of Tennessee, 2018); and precedent for pursuing a federal sentence of death in non-death penalty states (US v. Brent Christensen, Central District of Illinois, 2018). That clear precedent and the nature of the offenses in this case give me hope that our US Attorney will pursue a death sentence in these matters. For our part, we will prosecute Darius Sullivan and Xandria Harris and seek a sentence of life in prison.”
The death penalty was banned in Illinois in 2011, when then-governor Pat Quinn signed legislation outlawing the practice.