Investigation continues after US border patrol agent was fatally shot in Vermont

Authorities on Tuesday are continuing to investigate the fatal shooting of a U.S. Border Patrol agent that also left a suspect dead and another injured on a Vermont highway near Canada, authorities said.

The agent’s death Monday afternoon was confirmed by the FBI and Benjamine Huffman, acting secretary of the Department of Homeland Security in Washington. He was identified Tuesday as David C. Maland, who was assigned to the U.S. Border Patrol’s Swanton Sector.

The injured suspect was taken into custody after the violence on Interstate 91 in Coventry, about 20 miles from the Canadian border, the FBI said in a statement.

The bureau added Tuesday that the suspect who died was a German national in the U.S. on a visa. Neither suspect was identified.

Coventry is close to the U.S. Customs and Border Protection’s Newport Station, part of the Swanton Sector that encompasses Vermont and parts of New York and New Hampshire. The area includes 295 miles of international boundary with Canada.

A portion of the interstate was closed after the shooting and fully reopened just before noon Tuesday, according to state police, who said in an email that they were “unable to comment further on the circumstances of the incident,” referring questions to the FBI or U.S. Border patrol.

“U.S. Customs and Border Protection’s thoughts and prayers are with Agent Maland’s family during this difficult time,” a spokesperson wrote.

“We are heartbroken for our partners and share in their grief as they mourn the loss of their colleague, who also served his country as a veteran of the U.S. Air Force,” the FBI said in a press release.

Maland was shot at 3:15 p.m. on the interstate in Orleans County, a small community of 27,000 residents in the rural and remote Northeast Kingdom section of Vermont that straddles the Canadian border.

The Derby Line–Rock Island Border Crossing is located about 12 miles by highway north of Coventry. It’s a major link to the Canadian province of Quebec, giving northern Vermont more French speakers than most of New England.

Vincent Illuzzi, the state’s attorney in neighboring Essex County, drove past what appeared to be a U.S. Border Patrol agent traffic stop on I-91 past the Newport exit Monday afternoon, he said, shortly before authorities reported the shots were fired.

“I’m heading down the road, not much traffic, and I saw them on the right,” he told The Associated Press over the phone Tuesday.

The agent was driving an unmarked white pickup trick with a cab on it and red and blue flashing lights, he said. The stopped vehicle appeared be a small, blue car, he said. The agent was speaking with someone standing in front of his truck, behind the car, he said.

“Nothing unusual at that point,” Illuzzi said, but when he got back on the highway later that night, it looked like the same two vehicles were still parked and other law enforcement vehicles had arrived.

Illuzzi said the U.S. Border Patrol works closely with state and local police in his county. “We have limited law enforcement and they’re often primary responders in emergency cases.”

U.S. Customs and Border Protection, the Vermont State Police and Orleans County state’s attorney’s office declined to comment Tuesday. U.S. Customs and Border Protection planned to release information as it became available, an agency spokesperson said in a statement.

Vermont’s Sen. Bernie Sanders, Sen. Peter Welch and Rep. Becca Balint sent condolences to the agent’s family in a joint statement Monday.

“Today, Vermont and the U.S. Border Patrol experienced a tragic loss when a Border Patrol agent assigned to the Swanton Sector was shot and killed near Coventry, Vermont,” the statement said. “Our deepest condolences go out to the agent’s family, and to the Border Patrol. We will continue to monitor this situation with federal and state authorities and are appreciative of the first responders and emergency medical service providers who responded to the scene.”

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