Burgon Sealy Jr.: 5 Fast Facts You Need to Know

burgon sealy jr

Burgon Sealy. (Delaware State Police)

A man suspected in the fatal shooting of a Delaware State Police trooper is dead after a standoff with police that lasted nearly a day, police say.

While police have not yet identified him, sources told The News-Journal that the suspect is 26-year-old Burgon Sealy Jr.

Corporal Stephen J. Ballard, 32, was shot and killed while investigating a suspicious vehicle in the parking lot of a Wawa convenience store in Bear on Wednesday, police said.

Sealy fled from the scene and barricaded himself inside his father’s home in Middletown, Delaware, state police said in a press release.

Another suspect was taken into custody at the scene. The second suspect has not yet been named.

The shooting happened about noon outside the Wawa convenience store at 1605 Pulaski Highway. The standoff lasted through the night and into Thursday morning.

Sealy was shot dead by police about 9:30 a.m., according to a press release.

Here’s what you need to know:


1. The Gunman Shot the Trooper Multiple Times After He Fell to the Ground From the First Shot, Witnesses Say

State Police Colonel Nathaniel McQueen Jr. said the trooper saw a suspicious vehicle outside the Wawa, withe two suspects inside. McQueen said the trooper “made contact with the occupants and shortly thereafter, a struggle ensued. It was at this time that one of the two suspects exited the vehicle and proceeded to fire several rounds, striking the trooper.”

One suspect was taken into custody by responding troopers “without incident,” McQueen said.

According to police, Burgon Sealy Jr. was in a red Dodge Charger with another person in the parking lot and Ballard believed it was suspicious for a reason that hasn’t been made public. The trooper talked to the driver and then talked to Sealy, who said he had come to the Wawa lot in a gray Honda Accord.

Ballard asked Sealy to get out of the Charger, and that is when the struggle occurred, police said. Sealy fired at Ballard with a handgun he had in his waistband, according to police. Ballard tried to find cover behind a parked car, and Sealy followed him and shot him in the upper body, police said.

Sealy then approached Ballard as he was on the ground and fired multiple shots at close range, striking Ballard again in the upper body, before fleeing on foot, according to police.

A witness told The News Journal he was at a red light near the convenience store when the shooting occurred. Clarence Travers told the newspaper he heard gunfire and saw a police officer in a blue uniform fall to the ground.

Travers told The News Journal he then saw a man get out of his vehicle, walk around the car and shoot the officer on the ground multiple times, before running away.

Corporal Stephen Ballard.

Another witness told the newspaper the trooper’s SUV was parked “catty-corner to another vehicle, as if he quickly stopped and approached it.”

Kevin Lerner, who works at a barber shop next to the Wawa, told WPVI-TV he saw the shooting.

“When he pushed the officer he got a little room to run. So he pushed him and ran, and when he ran he ran for like seven or eight feet,” Lerner told the news station. “And then he turned around and started shooting. Just instantly started shooting.”

Witnesses said the suspect stood over Ballard and shot him “execution style,” the news station reports.

The state trooper was rushed to Christiana Hospital, The News Journal reports.

Colonel Nathaniel McQueen Jr., the State Police superintendent, told reports at a 5 p.m. press conference that the trooper had died.

“It is with great sadness and a heavy heart that we announce the death of a Delaware state trooper,” McQueen said. He did not identify the trooper, pending notification of next of kin.

A witness said people started CPR on the trooper before emergency responders arrived. Monica Moore told The News Journal she heard the gunshots and then saw the trooper on the ground face down. She said bystanders quickly rushed to begin CPR.

“I saw him and just wanted to help,” Moore said.


2. Sealy Exchanged Fire With Officers From His Father’s Home, Which Was ‘Obliterated’ by the Gun Battle

Burgon Sealy Jr. barricaded himself inside a home in the Brick Mill Farm Development in Middletown, according to a Delaware State Police press release. The development is located in the 500 block of St. Michaels Drive.

The home is owned by Burgon Sealy Sr., The News Journal reports.

Sealy called his family after he shot the trooper and told them what he had done. Investigators tracked Sealy to the home and he fired at them. Police from several agencies then surrounded him and shut down the neighborhood.

“Multiple Special Operations Response Teams and Conflict Management Teams from allied police agencies continued to make contact with the male subject and attempted to persuade him to surrender,” state police said in a statement. “At 9:17 a.m., the male suspect exited the residence and engaged police. The suspect was then shot by law enforcement. He was pronounced dead at the scene at 9:29 a.m.”

No injuries to officers were reported.


3. Neighbors Say They Heard Several Booms Throughout the Night as Police Used Explosives to Try to Draw Sealy Out

Police said they used explosive devices during the standoff, but did not enter the home, according to a press release:

At 8:22 p.m., the Explosives Ordinance Disposal Unit (EOD) utilized an explosive breeching charge on the front door. At this time, no entry has been made into the residence. Multiple Special Operations Response Teams and Conflict Management Teams from allied police agencies are attempting to make contact with the male subject and are continuing to attempt to persuade him to surrender.

Neighbors told Fox 29’s Steve Keeley that they heard several booms throughout the night. The explosives blew out the front door and every window of the home, Keeley reports.

The neighbor told Keeley the first bang woke him up about 1:45 a.m., followed by two more “loud booms” at 1:45 a.m., and then more explosions at 2:40 a.m., with smoke visible after that blast. A sixth loud boom was heard just before 3 a.m. The explosions continued through the morning, while police lit up the house with a spotlight and used a bullhorn to communicate with Sealy.

Several streets in the neighborhood were closed, Delaware State Police said in a press release.

“Brick Mill Road is currently closed between Marl Pit Road and Middletown Odessa Road (SR299). Commuters are advised to seek alternate routes of travel,” police said.

Police said, “Residents in the area are advised to stay inside their homes and lock their doors until notified otherwise.”

The neighborhood has been closed down for several hours. Residents were not allowed to re-enter Wednesday night, and a local fire station was being used as a shelter for those stranded. The neighborhood remained shut down after Sealy was killed.


4. Sealy, Who Went to the Same College as the Trooper, Was Arrested on Drug & Gun Charges in Florida in 2013

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Burgon Sealy Jr. (Volusia County Sheriff)

Burgon Sealy Jr.’s only prior criminal record appears to be a 2013 arrest in Volusia County, Florida, on felony charges of carrying a concealed weapon and misdemeanor possession of not more than 20 grams of marijuana, according to online court records.

Sealy pleaded no contest to misdemeanor charges and received 12 months probation in exchange for his adjudication being withheld. His probation was completed successfully in July 2014.

He was living in Daytona Beach, Florida, at the time, but the second half of his supervision was transferred to Delaware, allowing him to move back home.

Other details about that case were not immediately available.

Sealy attended Delaware State University, the same school that Corporal Stephen Ballard graduated from, a source told Heavy. It is not known if they two men had met prior to the shooting on Wednesday. Details about when Sealy, 26, attended the school and if he graduated were not immediately available.


5. The Trooper Graduated From the Academy in 2009 & Was a Loving Husband & Father, His Family Says

The fallen officer’s body was later taken to the state medical examiner’s office. A line of officers saluted as he was taken out of the hospital and a procession of police vehicles led him to the medical examiner’s office.

Delaware Governor John Carney has ordered flags to be flown at half-staff in Ballard’s memory.

“One of our sworn troopers has lost his life performing a duty on behalf of the people of Delaware,” Carney said in a statement. “My heart is with our fallen Delaware State Trooper’s family and the officers who have served beside him. Delaware’s law enforcement officers go to work every day knowing they put their lives on the line to protect ours. We are incredibly indebted to their bravery and service.”

Corporal Stephen Ballard served for more than eight years in the Delaware State Police, according to a press release.

He graduated from the academy in 2009, the Dover Post reported at the time. He was part of the 80th Delaware State Police recruit class.

Ballard was assigned to Troop 2 in Glasgow, state police said.

Condolences poured in on the state police Facebook page, including one from a Delaware resident who remembered Ballard fondly.

“Years ago my grandfather died. It wasn’t suspicious, but I guess the Local police couldn’t handle it. The state police showed up and it happened to be Cpl. Ballard,” Michael Beil wrote. He joked with my brother,myself and my dad. He made light of a terrible situation and made us laugh and forget what was really going on. I will never forget that. God bless his family and may he be in my family’s prayers.”

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Corporal Stephen Ballard and his wife. (Facebook)

Ballard graduated from Delaware State University and was a Bowie, Maryland, native, according to his Facebook page.

He was married in January 2016, according to a photo he posted to Facebook.

A family member said Ballard was a “husband a son a father and a loving loving person always smiling,” adding he will be “truly missed.”

A college friend said in a Facebook tribute Ballard was “an awesome man of God, Husband, Son, Father, Colleague, and Friend and I am blessed that I knew you!”