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A police department in a Washington suburb is mourning an officer who was fatally shot during her first day on the job.

Ashley Guindon, 28, of the Prince William County Police Department was fatally shot Saturday in Woodbridge, Virginia, while answering a domestic call in which two other officers were wounded and the suspect’s wife was killed, county police Chief Steve Hudson said at a press conference on Sunday. Guindon had taken the oath of office on Friday.

“The Prince William County Police Department is in deep mourning,” Hudson said. “This is a sad day for everybody in this room, a sad day for law enforcement.”

Ronald Williams Hamilton, 32, is accused of shooting the three police officers as they approached the front door of his house about 5:30 p.m. Saturday, Hudson said. He surrendered to backup officers who arrived after the three officers were shot, Hudson said.

Hamilton’s wife, Crystal Hamilton, 29, was found dead inside the house, Hudson said.

“The investigation revealed that the accused and his wife were involved in a verbal altercation which escalated physically,” he said. “The wife was able to contact police; however, before officers could arrive, she was allegedly shot and killed by the accused.”

The couple’s 11-year-old son fled the residence before the shooting, the chief said. Family and friends are caring for the boy, he said.

Two guns, a .45-caliber pistol and a rifle, were found in the house, Hudson said.

Hamilton, identified as a member of the Army who works at the Pentagon, was charged with one count of capital murder of a police officer, one count of first-degree murder, two counts of malicious wounding of a police officer and two counts of use of a firearm in commission of a felony.

He is being held without bond and is scheduled to be arraigned Monday.

Commonwealth Attorney Paul Ebert said he is “likely” to seek the death penalty but hasn’t made a decision yet.

Wounded were Officer Jesse Hempen, 31, who had been with the department for more than eight years, and Officer David McKeown, 33, a 10-year veteran. They were taken to Inova Fairfax Hospital and “We’re led to believe their recovery will be full,” Hudson said.

A day before the shooting, the department tweeted a photo of Guindon after her swearing-in.

Hudson said Guindon interned with the Prince William County Police Department while she attended graduate school. She officially joined the police force in 2015 and finished training in June, but she took some time off for “personal reasons.”

She decided to come back and was sworn in to the department on Friday.

“We were struck by her passion to do this job,” the chief said. “She couldn’t get it out of her blood. She clearly had a passion to serve others that went beyond herself.”

Before Saturday, the department has had three officers killed in the line of duty since 1970, it said on its website.

Prince William County is about 25 miles south of Washington, D.C.

Welcome Officers Steven Kendall & Ashley Guindon who were sworn in today & begin their shifts this weekend.Be safe! pic.twitter.com/92c2YLjcQx — Prince William PD (@PWCPolice) February 26, 2016

To our community, we know you are grieving too.Thanks for honoring Ashley this way. We are all a family in mourning. pic.twitter.com/VrCVCoSwis — Prince William PD (@PWCPolice) February 28, 2016





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