NC officer, Marine veteran shot in face, leaving 2 kids behind
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Henderson County, N.C., officer and Marine veteran Ryan Hendrix died after being shot in the face while trying to arrest a suspect from Virginia.
Hendrix, 35, and two other officers were responding to a 911 call about a break-in, which escalated into a shooting between a Mountain Home resident and the armed suspect.
"It is with a very heavy heart the family of Henderson County Deputy Ryan Hendrix and Sheriff Lowell Griffin announce Ryan’s passing," the sheriff's office wrote in a Thursday Facebook post. "Early this morning while the world slept, Ryan responded to assist a family needing help when they became innocent victims of a violent encounter."
Ryan Hendrix (Photo credit: Henderson County Sheriff’s Office)
The post added that, "Ryan’s family wants everyone to know that 'Ryan was doing the job he was born to do and he died doing the job he loved.'"
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Hendrix left behind two children, a 6-year-old son and 9-year-old daughter, and a fiancée whom he was set to marry in October. He served the Henderson County Sherrif's Office for eight years.
Ryan Hendrix (Photo credit: Henderson County Sheriff’s Office)
Henderson County deputies arrived at the scene after 2 a.m. and found the suspect in his car. The suspect "initially appeared to comply with lawful orders to show the deputies his hands…but in one rapid movement, he retrieved the gun, firing one round, striking [Hendrix] in the face and critically wounding him," Sheriff Lowell Griffin said during a Thursday press conference.
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The two other deputies with Hendrix returned fire and killed Robert Ray Doss Jr., a "career criminal with arrests in Georgia, South Carolina, Maryland and Virginia."
He had a record involving offenses for drugs, multiple arson crimes and felony thefts, Griffin said. The case remains under investigation.
Robert Ray Doss Jr. (Photo Credit: Henderson County Sheriff’s Office)
Hendrix was "an exemplary officer who was also a member of the Henderson County Sheriff's Office SWAT team, serves as a field training officer, and assists in many other capacities," Griffin said.
Hendrix was an organ donor who will "continue to help strangers for a lifetime, even after making the ultimate sacrifice," according to the Facebook post.
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The sheriff's office, in partnership with the North Carolina Police Benevolent Foundation, created a fundraising page for Hendrix's family; 100 percent of the proceeds will go to his family.
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