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Police Officer Walter G. Cottle | Seattle Police Department, Washington
Seattle Police Department, Washington

Police Officer

Walter G. Cottle

Seattle Police Department, Washington

End of Watch: Monday, September 29, 1930

Biographical Info

Age: 41
Tour of Duty: 9 years
Badge Number: Not available

Incident Details

Cause of Death: Gunfire
Date of Incident: September 29, 1930
Weapon Used: Gun; Unknown type
Suspect Info: Shot and killed

Police Officer Walter Cottle was shot and killed at the intersection of 12th Avenue and E Alder Street while walking his beat.

He had noticed a suspicious person walking around the area. When Officer Cottle stopped him and asked him if he lived in the neighborhood, the suspect produced a handgun and fatally shot Officer Cottle in the face.

It is believed that the suspect also fatally shot Police Officer Gene Perry on September 19, 1930.

The suspect was shot and killed by officers in Oakland, California on November 30, 1930. He was wanted for a $56,000 train robbery in Nobel, California. His weapon of choice was a rifle, and Seattle detectives later learned that the shooter had been seen in Seattle around the time of Officer Perry's shooting. The Postal Inspector in San Francisco had the shooter's rifle. Several rounds were fired through the rifle and those shell casings and the casings collected at the scene of Officer Perry's shooting were sent to a ballistics expert in Portland, Oregon. The results of ballistics tests were announced on May 1, 1932, that all of the shell casings had been fired and ejected from the shooter's rifle.

Officer Cottle was a U.S. Navy veteran of WWI and had served with the Seattle Police Department for nine years. He was survived by his wife and two children.