http://policelink.monster.com/news/articles/152641-tn-officer-killed-in-gun-battle-with-colorado-fugitive?comment_page=2&utm_source=nlet&utm_content=pl_c1_20110405_gunbattle_memChatanoogs Times Free Press via YellowBrix
April 04, 2011
CHATTANOOGA, TN – One by one, slowly, people started to come forward Sunday.
Some laid flowers beside the tape barrier outside the U.S. Money Shops store on Brainerd Road.
They didn’t personally know 51-year-old Chattanooga Police Department Sgt. Tim Chapin, but they mourned his loss.
“I’m just heartbroken,” said 62-year-old JoAnn Cook, choked with emotion, as she clutched a small vase of daisies adorned with a small American flag. “I grew up in Chattanooga. I can’t believe this happened. I just wanted to leave something.”
Behind her, 11 large bullet holes showed in the glass doors of the U.S. Money Shops, a pawnshop that was the scene of a gunbattle after a robbery Saturday.
Chapin, a 27-year veteran, was shot to death while pursuing the robbery suspect. Officer Lorin Johnston was hit in the back by a bullet but protected by body armor.
The suspect, Jesse R. Mathews, was also shot and remained hospitalized Sunday with no information available on his condition.
On Sunday, red tape X’s left by crime scene technicians showed where the battle unfolded on a road behind the pawnshop.
Chattanooga police said Chapin was one of three or four officers who answered the robbery alarm at 10:24 a.m. to the store at 5952 Brainerd Road. Police said the robber fired out the front door, then ran out a side door with police in pursuit. The robber shot at police during a 200-yard pursuit. Chapin hit the man with his car, but the man got back up and fired.
Chapin was shot in the head and died in just moments.
Several officers returned fire and took the suspect down. Colorado records show Mathews recently was paroled on a robbery conviction.
His Facebook page shows a picture of him with his chest and upper arms covered in tattoos of handguns, knives, bullets and brass knuckles.
Jesse Mathews
Chapin’s death hung on the minds of people who knew him and some who didn’t.
His usual table at Starbucks on Brainerd Road bore an empty coffee cup, a copy of the Times Free Press with the headline, “A city mourns,” and a hand-lettered sign: “This seat is closed out of respect for Officer Tim where he sat every day for the past two years.”
He had enjoyed his usual tall decaf coffee earlier Saturday morning.
“We were really, really busy that day. He managed to sit down for a few minutes, but then he darted out,” said Michelle Wade, who works as a barista at the coffeehouse.
She said the shift manager came up with the idea of reserving the table. Patrons reflected on the image as they stood in line before giving their order.
“I wrote the sign and we put it up. People are just looking at it. Nobody has sat there. It’s been quiet,” she said.
At Chapin’s church, Abba’s House Central Baptist in Hixson, the sermon was dedicated to the slain officer. He had been a member for 22 years.