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-Lurid Crime Tales- |
Missouri firefighter paramedic dies after being stabbed in ambulance by patient: ''Unfathomable crime'' |
2025-04-29 |
Graham Hoffman, a 29-year-old paramedic and firefighter with the Kansas City Fire Department (KCFD), died Sunday while responding to a welfare check for a woman found wandering along a highway and bleeding heavily from her hand around 1 a.m. The woman, 39-year-old Shanetta Boswell, initially refused help from Hoffman and police, but then changed her mind and agreed to be taken to the hospital for treatment, authorities told KSHB. But on the way there, she allegedly attack paramedics. Cops who were following the the ambulance reported that it suddenly veered off the road and the driver lept out in a panic and opened the back doors to help his colleague while shouting ''she has a knife.'' Inside, Hoffman was found bleeding heavily from the chest. Authorities said Boswell attempted to fight police and drive off with the ambulance — biting an officer on the arm as he drew his weapon, according to cops. As officers fought to subdue her, the ambulance driver attempted to revive Hoffman as he slipped out of consciousness. But it was too late, and he was later pronounced dead after being rushed to a nearby hospital, authorities said. Boswell was charged with first degree murder and is being held on $1 million bond. Boswell also faces charges of resisting/interfering with arrest and third-degree assault. Just days before the attack she had been let go for another alleged assault on a public servant, authorities said. In that incident, Boswell allegedly sank her teeth into a police officer who was attempting to arrest her on April 23, according to KSHB. She was charged with second-degree assault and resisting arrest — but posted her $10,000 bond and was released sometime before Hoffman's murder over the weekend. |
Posted by:Fred |
#2 Ref #1: Called home whilst napping; the blessed exit. |
Posted by: Besoeker 2025-04-29 12:23 |
#1 Decades ago during a training session I rode with an EMS crew of a major city system. It was a great learning experience. One of the paramedics carried a concealed pistol for just this eventuality. Probably he was in violation of some protocol or law, we didn't discuss it. Up to that point he never had to use it. Years ago I also worked with an ER doctor who formerly had been a GP in Detroit. He got shot by a patient in his office and so decided to leave that practice and locality. He carried a very short pistol in an ankle holster when working in an ER. He too never had to use it. He wound up dying peacefully in his sleep, taking a nap while on duty. The nurses discovered him when he didn't answer phone calls to his room. |
Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418 2025-04-29 11:18 |