COLD SPRING, MINN. - The local man who hanged himself after becoming a "person of interest" in the shotgun killing of officer Thomas Decker had faced imminent arrest on the night of Decker's shooting.
According to court records, Eric J. Thomes, 31, a regular patron of Winners Bar near where Decker was shot, had failed to appear in court in connection with a drunken-driving charge and a judge had ordered that he be taken into custody.
Thomes was later linked to a vehicle seen leaving the bar after Decker was shot, and police had interrogated him several times before he committed suicide last week.
His death threw a new obstacle before investigators, who said Friday they were still struggling to piece together the events that led up to Decker being shot twice in the head. Decker had assisted in the DWI arrest of Thomes, but it was unclear whether Thomes understood he was about to face the threat of arrest on the night of Decker's killing.
Authorities on Saturday said they had no new information about the investigation or possible suspects. On Friday, they stopped short of calling Thomes a suspect, though they linked him to the shotgun believed used in the slaying. They said the investigation remained open and refused to rule out as a suspect Ryan Larson, who was arrested the night of the shooting but later released.
The unanswered questions have left a continuing sense of unease in the small central Minnesota town of Cold Spring.
"People just want to have closure ... so the Decker family can get some justice and the town can get to rebuilding," Mayor Doug Schmitz said Saturday. "It's been a tough time ... People in town are still somewhat on guard."
At Winners Bar, near where Decker was gunned down shortly before midnight on Nov. 29, patrons didn't want to talk about the slain officer, or Thomes, who police said killed himself Wednesday when officers went to his house for a follow-up interview in the Decker case.