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The suspect is a student in the Pinellas County Schools, but Harmon wouldn't say which school. It wasn't clear how the boy obtained the gun, Harmon said. Crawford, who was married, eligible for retirement and the father of an adult daughter, was pronounced dead at a hospital. Officers saluted the van that carried his body to the medical examiner's office Tuesday morning. Crawford, who loved horses, lived in a rural community north of St. Petersburg. On Jan. 24, two St. Petersburg officers -- Jeffrey A. Yaslowitz and Thomas Baitinger
-- were killed as they helped serve a warrant on a man with a long criminal history. Their killer died in the siege. Prior to that, the St. Petersburg Police department hadn't had an officer killed in the line of duty in more than 30 years. "We're not even done healing from the first tragedy, then boom, we have a second one," said St. Petersburg Detective Mark Marland, who is also the police union president. St. Petersburg Mayor Bill Foster said the city will now be able to bury officer Crawford and have some closure
-- but residents, officers and parents must also learn why a teenager was carrying a handgun. "We as a community need to stand up and do a better job," Foster said.
[Associated
Press;
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