New Orleans police arrested Sunday the
man suspected of shooting and killing a police officer who was
transporting him to jail a day earlier, ending a nearly 24-hour manhunt
that left residents on edge.
During a press conference Sunday, New Orleans Police Chief Michael
Harrison said Travis Boys, 33, was arrested Sunday morning near the
intersection of Reynes St. and St. Claude Ave. Boys was arrested through
tips received across the metropolitan area, Harrison said, which
detailed the Dodge pickup truck Boys was spotted in. Marshals pursued
Boys in the truck, then continued the chase on foot when he abandoned
the vehicle and fled into the St. Roch neighborhood.
Boys was
arrested as he boarded a commuter bus, Harrison said. The suspect was
still wearing parts of the broken handcuffs he had on when he escaped
police custody Saturday. He will be charged with first-degree murder of a
police officer, aggravated escape and illegal possession of a firearm,
as well as the aggravated assault charge, Harrison said.
After being recaptured, Boys was taken to a local hospital suffering from dehydration, Harrison said.
Investigators said Boys, sitting in the back of the police cruiser
Saturday morning, somehow obtained a gun as he was handcuffed behind his
back and got through a barrier that separated him from the front seat
of the vehicle. Boys then shot veteran Officer Daryle Holloway, 45,
causing the cruiser to crash into a utility pole, police said, according to WVUE. Boys escaped on foot after the crash.
Harrison said Boys got into the front seat through an opening in the cage that separates the front and back seats.
"Officer Holloway put up a fight to try to get the subject to not
exit the vehicle, but succumbed to his injuries," Harrison said.
The murder of Holloway, a 22-year veteran of the police department,
left New Orleans’ St. Roch neighborhood on edge as body-armored officers
with high-powered rifles swept houses for Boys.
"I literally live two blocks away and I just want to go home," said
Jayne Greppin, as sunlight began to dim Saturday evening. She said
police hadn't stopped her when she left her house to get cigarettes, but
wasn't allowed back onto her street shortly thereafter. The search
spanned several blocks and police were keeping some people away from
their homes, while not allowing others to come out.
Department spokesman Tyler Gamble said police were trying to
determine what weapon Boys used and how he obtained it, but do not
believe Boys used the officer's gun.
"I look out the door — I'd heard the boom — I see the fire truck here
on the corner," he said. It was only later, after police had swarmed
into the area that he learned what happened.
“We lost a hero, and it will take time for us to recover,” New
Orleans Mayor Mitch Landrieu said Sunday during the press conference
with Harrison.
In speaking of Holloway, Landrieu said, “He was
more than a good cop; he was a great man,” acknowledging that the
officer's murder occurred a day before Father’s Day.
State police, St. Tammany Parish deputies, Housing Authority of New
Orleans police and the U.S. Marshals Service were among the agencies
searching for Boys.
A helicopter circled overhead as marked and unmarked units from state
police and other law enforcement agencies cruised side streets after
the shooting. Utility workers worked to replace the downed power pole.
Vincent Alexander, a prep cook at Margaritaville restaurant in the
French Quarter, said he was walking home from work when police detoured
him a short distance from his house. "I just called my roommate. They're
not letting him get out the house."
Holloway had been a member of the New Orleans Police Department since 1992. He was the father of three children.
Harrison said Holloway was not the arresting officer, but was
transporting Boys to a jail when the shooting occurred. Boys was under
arrest on an aggravated assault charge at the time of the shooting.
Harrison said he met with two of Holloway's children and Holloway's
former wife at the hospital after he died. "As a new chief, it was the
hardest thing I've ever had to do in my life," said Harrison, who became
chief last year.
He said he had known Holloway for 23 years and described him as "a great police officer."
Landrieu condemned the killing as "the lowest of the low," calling it "a despicable and cowardly act."
"Killing an officer in the line of duty is an attack on our community
that will not stand," Landrieu said in a statement. "The heart and soul
of New Orleans is heavy today as our community mourns one of our city's
finest."
The last New Orleans Police Department officer killed in the line of
duty was Officer Rodney Thomas on July 7, 2013, according to Gamble.
More recently, a Housing Authority police officer, James Bennett Jr.,
45, was found shot to death in his patrol car.
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