Police identify suspect in killing of Seattle police officer Timothy Brenton

SEATTLE — A man accused of shooting and killing a police officer on Halloween is also suspected of firebombing police cruisers and other property nine days earlier, police said Saturday.

At a news conference, Assistant Police Chief Jim Pugel identified 41-year-old Christopher Monfort as the man shot by police on Friday as he was sought in connection with the killing of officer Timothy Brenton, a Marysville resident. Pugel also said investigators found improvised explosive devices at Monfort’s apartment.

“This man, from everything we can tell is a lone domestic terrorist,” Pugel said. “At this moment we cannot find any ties to anyone else.”

Brenton was sitting in a car Oct. 31 with rookie officer Britt Sweeney following a traffic stop when shots were fired. Sweeney was grazed in the neck.

Detectives have asked the King County prosecutor’s office for formal charges in the case.

On Saturday morning, Monfort was in serious condition in the intensive care unit at Harborview Medical Center, said hospital spokeswoman Susan Gregg-Hanson. He underwent hours of surgery Friday night and arrived at the hospital in critical condition with “multiple injuries.”

Pugel said police believe Monfort is connected to the Oct. 22 firebombings of three Seattle police cruisers and a mobile command post at a nearby city garage. Investigators reportedly found a note threatening to kill officers and fliers protesting police brutality at the arson scene.

Pugel said an item found at the maintenance yard was similar to one found near the shooting scene. The Seattle Times reported, citing unnamed law-enforcement contacts, that the item was an American flag.

On Friday, police detectives were pursuing a tip from a resident who said a car at an apartment complex in suburban Tukwila matched the description of an old Datsun 210 seen nearby when Brenton was killed.

While officers examined the car, which was covered by a tarp, television footage showed dozens of cruisers surrounding the building.

Pugel said detectives were walking to speak with other law enforcement conducting surveillance when Monfort left his apartment and approached the three detectives.

According to Pugel, detectives started asking Monfort questions, at which time he pulled a gun and tried to shoot. Monfort tried to escape up a set of stairs after the gun failed to go off, Pugel said.

At the top of the stairs, Pugel said, Monfort again displayed his gun toward detectives who fired shots. The detectives fired four to six times, although Pugel did not know how many times Monfort was hit.

Pugel said the three Seattle police detectives who shot Monfort have been placed on administrative leave, which is routine after an officer-involved shooting.

Friday’s shooting happened as a memorial service for Brenton was finishing at Seattle’s KeyArena.

Inside Monfort’s apartment, Pugel said, investigators found two rifles, including a military-style assault rifle being examined as the possible weapon used to kill Brenton.

Pugel also said police disarmed the improvised explosive devices found in the apartment before removing them.

Monfort received a bachelor’s degree from the University of Washington in March 2008, according to the university’s degree-validation Web site. His major was in Law, Societies and Justice.

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