Armed vet shot, killed outside Maine VA hospital
Law enforcement officers shot and killed an armed military veteran Thursday in woods within sight of the entrance of a Veterans Affairs hospital in Augusta, Maine Attorney General Janet Mills said.
Former Marine James Popkowski, 37, was fatally wounded in the mid-morning confrontation near the Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center in an area of the city known as Togus.
Mills said Popkowski, who lived about 150 miles away in the town of Medway, was neither a patient nor a staff member of the hospital. She said it was not clear what triggered the confrontation in woods near the hospital. She also said it wasn't clear whether the officers were fired upon by Popkowski.
But "From the preliminary investigation, it appears to be defense of themselves and defense of third parties," she said.
The attorney general's office said Popkowski was a former Marine, but had no further information on when or where he served. The office said VA police officer Thomas Park and state game warden Sgt. Ron Dunham used deadly force against the man. A third officer, game warden Joey Lefebrve, was involved but did not use deadly force.
Both Dunham and Lefebrve were placed on administrative leave with pay pending the outcome of the investigation.
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Neighbors gave differing accounts of whether people hunt in the woods surrounding the hospital. The area where the shooting took place was marked with a "no trespassing" sign and identified as federal property.
Paul Stevens of Belgrade, who was visiting his uncle who lives near the woods, said he saw what happened.
Stevens, who said he was a National Rifle Association shooting instructor, said officers fired on a man armed with what looked like a rifle. About eight shots were fired and the man fell to the ground, he said. Stevens said he did not see any aggressive action by Popkowski before he was shot.
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Popkowski was apparently the owner of a Toyota pickup with a veteran's license plate that was parked about 40 to 50 feet off the road, Shaw said. Shaw said he'd seen the pickup parked in the area previously.
By law, the attorney general's office in Maine investigates whenever officers use lethal force.
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