Police gather for funeral of 3 Pennsylvania detectives ambushed by gunman

Red Lion, Pennsylvania – Hundreds of police officers are expected to attend funeral closed Thursday for three Pennsylvania detectives killed last week by a man who was inside the house of a woman he was accused of hunt.
The service at Living Word Community Church in Red Lion begins at noon, following a procession to escort the bodies of regional police detectives from the county of Northern York Cody Michael Becker, Mark Edward Baker and Ismenheiser from a funeral show.
The event is not open to the public, but the church will broadcast online service. This is the second time this year that the church has hosted services for the police killed in the exercise of its functions.
The results of the autopsy published this week indicated that the three officers died of several ball injuries.
A prosecutor said that the suspect of hunt, Matthew James Ruth, 24, shot the police as they opened the door to the woman’s home. The three were killed and two other officers were seriously injured.
The District of the District of the County of York, Tim Barker, said that he believed that Ruth, who died in the exchange of gunshots, had planned to embusle the woman that he had been accused of hunt.
The three veterans of the police were memorized as being devoted to their family and their community.
Becker, 39, resident of Spring Grove, had been a multi-sport star athlete in high school. Baker, 53, who lived in Dover, was a specialist in the investigation into computer criminalics. Emenheiser, 43, from York, was called perfectionist with dreams of opening a gymnasium.
Becker has been a detective sergeant and has been in the regional force of the north for 16 years. His Billology told how, in 2010, he climbed on the second floor of a fire building to catch children who escaped by a window. He leaves to mourn a woman and two children. A second service, public funerals for Becker, will be held on Sunday in Spring Grove Area High School in Spring Grove.
Baker, an American army veteran, spent three years in the Philadelphia police service before joining Northern Régional in 2004, first as a patrol officer and then in computer criminalics. He had been a detective for 15 years. He was an Eagle Scout and an adult tracking chief. Survivors include a woman and four children; A fifth child preceded it.
Emenheiser graduated from the York criminal justice and served in American secret services before being hired by Northern Régional. He carried out 104 arrests of the 2010 and was appointed officer of the year, among other professional honors for two decades with the department.
In 2005, Emenheiser broke a window in a mobile fire house in Thomasville and wore a safe man. The interests of Emenheiser included physical form, home renovations and football training for young people. His surviving family includes a woman and two children.




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