Woman Who Fired 5 Shots in Police Station Gets 12 Years

Bulletproof glass prevented anybody from getting hurt in Connecticut station
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Oct 7, 2023 9:00 AM CDT
Updated Apr 8, 2025 4:39 PM CDT
Bulletproof Glass Saves Cops in Police Station Shooting
Suzanne Laprise is arraigned in state Superior Court in New Britain, Connecticut, Oct. 6, 2023.   (Jim Michaud/Hearst Connecticut Media via AP, file)
UPDATE Apr 8, 2025 4:39 PM CDT

A Connecticut woman was sentenced Tuesday to 12 years in prison for firing a gun several times in the lobby of a police station, where an officer fired back but bulletproof glass prevented anyone from getting hurt. Suzanne Laprise walked into the Bristol police department in October 2023 distraught, under the influence of alcohol, and carrying a 9 mm pistol, police said. She fired three shots at the windows of the front desk and two more at an interior door, which officers were standing behind as they tried to talk with her. Laprise pleaded guilty to attempted first-degree assault in February. She was initially charged with attempted murder and other crimes. "She's a 53-year-old with no prior record who had a lot of stressors in her life," her public defender, Christopher Eddy, told the AP after the sentencing hearing. "She wanted to kill herself that night, and she's lucky that the Bristol police were so professional in how they apprehended her."

Oct 7, 2023 9:00 AM CDT

A woman fired several gunshots in the lobby of a Connecticut police station, but bulletproof glass prevented anyone from being injured, authorities said Friday as they charged her with attempted murder and other crimes. The shooting happened at the Bristol Police Department just after 10:30pm local time on Thursday, per the AP. The woman, Suzanne Laprise, 51, of nearby Plainville, repeatedly said "kill me" as she was being handcuffed following the incident, according to a police report obtained by Hearst Connecticut Media Group. She was under the influence of drugs or alcohol and armed with an illegal high-capacity magazine when she fired several shots at the window of the front desk, which was unoccupied at the time, police said in a news release. None of the shots penetrated the bullet-resistant glass, officials said.

Officers tried to negotiate with Laprise, but she fired more shots toward them, the statement said. One officer shot back at her. She put her gun down and officers used a stun gun to subdue her. She was arrested and taken to a hospital for evaluation. Authorities didn't provide details on what kind of firearm was used in the shooting. Citing the police report, HCMG said a witness told police Laprise had been at a Bristol sports bar less than two hours before the shooting. The witness quoted Laprise as saying, "I am going to the Bristol Police Department and tell them to kill me or I will shoot them." The witness told police they suggested to Laprise that she get mental health treatment and in the meantime to go home and get some sleep. Laprise agreed, but the witness saw her drive away toward the police department instead, the report said.

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Bristol police said that officers' actions were heroic. "Despite a truly life-threatening incident, they responded with calm, poise, and professionalism, resulting in no loss of life or serious injury to anyone," police said in a statement on X. Laprise was released from the hospital into police custody and appeared in state court in New Britain, where a judge lowered the $3 million bond set by police to $1 million. In court, a rep from the public defender's office described Laprise as a mother of three adult children who's never been in trouble with the law before and volunteers at church. She worked for a state agency that helps developmentally disabled people for more than two decades and has a son with Down syndrome, said David Napierkowski, an intern in the public defender's office. State officials said Laprise retired in 2020. Laprise was charged with attempted murder and several gun crimes, including illegal possession of a high-capacity magazine. She also was charged with criminal mischief, reckless endangerment, and breach of peace.

(More shooting stories.)

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