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Details emerge in fatal shooting of Kan. detective

Detective Brad Lancaster was a U.S. Air Force veteran who had served two tours of duty overseas

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This undated image provided by the Kansas City Police Department shows Brad Lancaster.

Kansas City Police Department via AP

Duty Death: Brad Lancaster - [Kansas City]

End of Service: 09/05/2016

By Jim Suhr and Margaret Stafford
Associated Press

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — A suspect in the fatal shooting of a police detective in Kansas City, Kansas, and a subsequent string of carjackings remained in the hospital Tuesday after he was shot and wounded by police during his arrest in neighboring Missouri.

The detective, 39-year-old Brad Lancaster, was shot at least twice around 12:30 p.m. Monday near the Kansas Speedway. He died three hours later after undergoing surgery, his department said in a statement.

Police said the gunman shot the detective and fled in the officer’s unmarked car. He later hijacked a vehicle with two children inside before abandoning that in nearby Basehor, Kansas, leaving those kids unharmed.

He then crashed another vehicle while being pursued by officers in Kansas City, Missouri, and was shot by police as he attempted to hijack yet another vehicle. That female motorist, who police say was shot by the would-be carjacker, was in stable condition Tuesday at an unspecified hospital, Kansas City, Missouri, police spokesman Amber Thomas-Hickerson said.

Police identified the suspect as Curtis Ayers, a 28-year-old man from Tonganoxie, Kansas. He was taken into custody in Kansas City, Missouri, and also was hospitalized Tuesday in stable condition, Thomas-Hickerson said.

“This individual was very dangerous. We are so happy that this individual is in custody,” Kansas City, Kansas, police spokesman Patrick McCallop told reporters. “We are so glad this situation has come to an end.”

There was no immediate word Tuesday about charges against Ayers.

In comments posted on the department’s website Tuesday, Police Chief Terry Zeigler expressed thanks for the prayers, messages and support for Lancaster’s family and the department. He said Monday that the detective had “fought a good fight, but unfortunately he died from his injuries.”

Lancaster’s mother, Carolynn Lancaster, told The Kansas City Star that her son “was the rock of the family.” She couldn’t immediately be reached by The Associated Press for comment, and the department said in an email Monday that Lancaster’s family has requested privacy.

Brad Lancaster was a U.S. Air Force veteran who had served two tours of duty overseas, including one in Kuwait, the newspaper reported. Lancaster said her son had a wife and two daughters.

Ayers served prison time in Kansas in recent years for convictions involving child abandonment, fleeing or trying to elude law enforcers, and interference with a law enforcement officer, online Kansas Department of Corrections records show. Court records say he was also charged in North Carolina with offenses ranging from misdemeanor theft to possession of stolen goods and burglarizing vehicles.

Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt extended his prayers to Lancaster’s family and the police.

“Kansas mourns the senseless death of yet another dedicated law enforcement officer in the line of duty,” he said in a statement Tuesday.

Copyright 2016 The Associated Press

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