Five Phoenix police officers and one city of Phoenix employee who refused to turn over their DNA to detectives investigating the mysterious shooting death of Phoenix Sergeant Sean Drenth were ordered last week by a judge to give up their DNA -- much to their dismay.
The Phoenix Police Department collected the DNA last week. What the DNA will reveal is anyone's guess.
On the night of Drenth's October death near the State Capitol, dozens of law enforcement officers were at the scene -- and they apparently left their DNA everywhere.
Nearly 200 Phoenix police officers submitted their DNA to detectives to
clear them of any involvement in the death. Five -- and one city
employee -- did not.
Phoenix Sergeant Trent Crump tells New Times the reason the P.P.D.
sought the DNA of the final six subjects is not because they're
necessarily suspects, rather to "help identify unexplained DNA in the scene."
The
report on Drenth's death, as Phoenix police officials explained earlier this year, offers a lot of questions,
but few answers as to who shot him -- and it's still unclear whether
his death was a suicide or murder.
One thing, however, seems
clear: Drenth wasn't the only person at the scene in the 29-minute
window from when he got to the scene of the shooting and when his body was discovered by a State
Capitol Police officer.
Detectives were able to track Drenth's movements for the two hours prior
to when his body was discovered via-a GPS device in his squad car.
According to Lieutenant Joe Knott, head of the P.P.D.'s homicide unit,
Drenth was doing routine patrol in the areas between 7th Avenue to the
I-17, and Buckeye Road and Jefferson Street during the two hours before
his death.
About 10:26 p.m., Drenth's vehicle pulled into a parking lot near
railroad tracks across from the State Capitol. The spot is popular
amongst cops who often park there to do paperwork. Drenth activated a
computer device in his cruiser that indicates when he's stopped someone,
which suggests he'd encountered someone near the parking lot.
About 30 minutes later,
his body was discovered next to the open passenger door of his squad car
with a shotgun wound under his chin and his shotgun resting on his
chest as he lay on his back.
"The biggest question is the position of the shotgun," Knott says. He
notes, it's very possible someone staged the crime scene
and placed the shotgun on Drenth's dead body, so finding the gun on his
chest isn't the smoking gun (pardon the pun) that he killed himself.
Adding to the mystery is that Drenth's service weapon was found on the
other side of a fence on the west side of the parking lot where his body
was
found. Another of Drenth's weapons was found next to his body. One
bullet had been fired in the direction of where the other gun was
found.
If Drenth killed himself, it seems he made the scene as confusing as
possible for investigators -- unless someone found his body in the 29
minutes between when he got to the parking lot and when his body was
discovered and moved evidence around; a scenario police aren't ruling
out.
"We have significant evidence to suggest someone was at the scene,"
Knott says. Finding out who that person was is the problem investigators
continue to face.
Based on police interviews with friends and family, it doesn't seem as
though Drenth was the kind of guy who wanted to kill himself.
"Absolutely nobody thinks Sean Drenth would have killed himself for any reason," Knott says of those close to the dead sergeant.
In his own opinion of whether Drenth was murdered or committed suicide, Knott doesn't know what to think.
"I started at 50/50 [in terms of whether it was murder or suicide]," he
says. "Throughout the investigation, that's shifted in both
directions...it's extremely frustrating."
Knott says we may never know exactly what happened to Drenth, but the case remains open and the department will continue to investigate.