Retired CT state trooper who was among 1st to respond to Sandy Hook shooting dies of COVID-19
A retired Connecticut State Police trooper, who was among the first to respond to the 2012 mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School, has died of COVID-19, officials said.
Patrick Dragon, 50, of Brooklyn, Connecticut, died Saturday at Hartford Hospital in the state's capital, according to the Connecticut State Police, which announced his death in a Facebook post Monday night.
The Foster Police Department in the Rhode Island town of Foster, where Dragon was working as a dispatcher, confirmed his death "after a valiant battle with COVID."
Foster Police Chief David Breit described Dragon as "a great person, kind, caring and a friend to all who met him."
"There are not enough words, to describe the kind of a person that Patrick was," Breit wrote in a Facebook post Sunday morning.
The East Brooklyn Fire Department in the Connecticut town of Brooklyn, where Dragon served for 34 years, most recently as a deputy chief, also announced his death.
"We cannot express how deeply he will be missed and wish to extend our deepest condolences to the Dragon family," the department wrote in a Facebook post.