The suspect accused of killing a police officer in Memphis, Tennessee, over the weekend is now in custody, authorities said.
Tremaine Wilbourn, 29, has surrendered to federal marshals, the Shelby County Sheriff’s Office said Monday.
Authorities had described Wilbourn as armed and dangerous.
He had been out on supervised release for a 121-month sentence for robbery, Memphis Police Director Toney Armstrong said.
Police chief: Slain officer interrupted drug deal
It started as a regular traffic stop on a weekend night in Tennessee. Officer Sean Bolton saw an illegally parked car on the streets of Memphis, pulled up in front of it and shone his spotlight.
When he approached the vehicle, a passenger confronted him.
A struggle ensued, and the passenger shot Bolton multiple times, authorities said. The car drove off, leaving the officer for dead.
“Officer Bolton apparently interrupted some sort of drug transaction,” Armstrong said. “A digital scale and a small baggie of marijuana … were located inside of the vehicle.”
The violence was senseless given how mundane the stop was, Armstrong said.
“We’re talking about less than 2 grams of marijuana. You’re talking about a misdemeanor citation,” he said. “We probably would not have even transported for that.”
Bolton loved to read, work out
Nearby residents heard the gunshots late Saturday night and used Bolton’s radio to call for help. Emergency crews took him to a hospital in critical condition, where he was later pronounced dead.
Armstrong described the suspect as a “coward.”
“You gunned down, you murdered a police officer, for less than 2 grams of marijuana,” he said. “You literally destroyed a family.”
Friends described the Iraq veteran as a gentle man who did not believe in using force.
“For a police officer to have that kind of temperament, and to take such a cautious approach to the use of force, he was a credit to the uniform,” his friend Steve Clements told The Commercial Appeal newspaper in Memphis.
Bolton was quiet and loved to read and go to the gym, friend Minda Klitzner told the paper.
So much so, he’d read in the car during road trips.
Fallen officers
Bolton, 33, is one of 19 officers killed nationwide this year by violent suspects. The deaths at the hands of suspects run the gamut — veterans and rookie officers — and span the nation — from Georgia to California
“Last night, we lost not only an officer, but a great man, a dedicated servant to our community and a family member,” Armstrong said.
This is the third time a Memphis police officer has been killed in the past four years.