Circumstance:
At about 5 pm on Sunday, May 30, 2004, Sergeant John S. Ashley was on routine patrol when he suffered a medical emergency while in the 1600 block of 30th Street, NW. While assisting a young lady who was trying to catch a dog, belonging to George Stephanopolis, he fell unconscious after running a short distance. Subsequently, MPDC and DC Fire and Emergency Medical Services personnel were summoned to the scene to assist the officer.
With CPR in progress, Sergeant Ashley was transported to The George Washington University Hospital, where he was pronounced dead at 5:36 pm.
While a detective, Sergeant Ashley was instrumental in the closure of a car-bombing incident on upper Wisconsin Avenue, NW, in the summer of 2002. As a result of his active policing in the Second District, he developed lasting relationships with community members. Commander Jeffrey Moore characterized Ashley as having a "great work ethic…he died doing something he loved."
Sergeant Ashley's funeral was held on June 4, 2004, at St. Leo's Catholic Church in Fairfax, Virginia.
He is survived by daughter Tiffany Marie Katinas; mother, Marion B. Ashley of Manassas, VA; father, Brig. Gen. Maurice C. Ashley, USMC (Ret.) of Annapolis, MD and his siblings.
Circumstance:
At about 5 pm on Sunday, May 30, 2004, Sergeant John S. Ashley was on routine patrol when he suffered a medical emergency while in the 1600 block of 30th Street, NW. While assisting a young lady who was trying to catch a dog, belonging to George Stephanopolis, he fell unconscious after running a short distance. Subsequently, MPDC and DC Fire and Emergency Medical Services personnel were summoned to the scene to assist the officer.
With CPR in progress, Sergeant Ashley was transported to The George Washington University Hospital, where he was pronounced dead at 5:36 pm.
While a detective, Sergeant Ashley was instrumental in the closure of a car-bombing incident on upper Wisconsin Avenue, NW, in the summer of 2002. As a result of his active policing in the Second District, he developed lasting relationships with community members. Commander Jeffrey Moore characterized Ashley as having a "great work ethic…he died doing something he loved."
Sergeant Ashley's funeral was held on June 4, 2004, at St. Leo's Catholic Church in Fairfax, Virginia.
He is survived by daughter Tiffany Marie Katinas; mother, Marion B. Ashley of Manassas, VA; father, Brig. Gen. Maurice C. Ashley, USMC (Ret.) of Annapolis, MD and his siblings.
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