It was a seemingly routine burglary call, like so many Sgt. Steve Owen had answered in his 29 years with the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department.
He had been through far worse, such as the time three years ago when he and other deputies faced off against an armed man who had taken a driver hostage.
But on Wednesday, the routine call turned deadly for Owen.
The burly 53-year-old was fatally shot behind an apartment building near Antelope Valley College in Lancaster by the burglary suspect, who then commandeered Owen’s patrol car and rammed it into another deputy’s car.
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People mourn the death of Los Angeles County Sheriff’s deputy Sgt. Steve Owen during a candlelight vigil in Lancaster on Saturday.
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People mourn the death of Los Angeles County Sheriff’s deputy Sgt. Steve Owen during a candlelight vigil in Lancaster Saturday.
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Kailey Tenuta, 10, wipes her eyes as community members mourn the death of Los Angeles County Sheriff’s deputy Sgt. Steve Owen during a candlelight vigil in Lancaster Saturday.
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Lancaster resident Louie Garcia, 22, pays his respects in front of a memorial for L.A. County Sheriff’s Sgt. Steve Owen, located in front of the entrance to the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department in Lancaster.
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L.A. County firefighters from Acton salute from the Sierra Highway Soledad overpass as the procession escorting the body of Sgt. Steve Owen passes.
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Kathleen Simons holds a flag on the Sierra Highway Soledad overpass in Acton as the procession escorting the body of Sgt. Steve Owen returns to Lancaster.
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Kathleen Simons holds a flag as she joins others on the Sierra Highway Soledad overpass in Acton to pay respect to the procession escorting the body of Sgt. Steve Owen back to Lancaster.
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Sheriff’s vehicles escort the hearse on the 14 Freeway as it carries the body of Sgt. Steve Owen back to Lancaster from the L.A. coroner’s office.
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An emotional L.A. County Sheriff Jim McDonnell passes the memorial for Sgt. Steve Owen during a news conference at the Lancaster sheriff’s station.
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Standing next to a portrait of Sgt. Steve Owen, an emotional Los Angeles County Sheriff Jim McDonnell addresses a press conference at the Lancaster Sheriff’s station Thursday.
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Mia Ayala, 6, kneels to pray with her father Michael and grandmother Candy Ayala at a growing memorial at the Lancaster Sheriff’s station.
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Seven-year-old Eric Robb and his sister, Payton, 4, deliver flowers to L.A. County Deputy Ybarra at the Lancaster Sheriffs HQ Thursday morning.
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Jay Emanuel, left, a former law enforcement officer, and Alberto Gonzalez prepare a candle at a growing memorial at the Lancaster Sheriffs station.
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Gerard Rivers, with tears streaming down his face, remembers Sgt. Steve Owen who was his High School football coach.
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LA County Sheriff Deputy Villalobos touches a hand written note “You are my HERO” at a growing memorial at the Lancaster Sheriffs HQ Thursday morning.
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Sheriff Jim McDonnell arrives at Lancaster Sheriff’s station by helicopter Thursday afternoon to mert with the Sgt Steve Owen’s family and with Sheriffs deputies.
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Kenny Parnell brought a candle and red heart balloon as he reflects at a growing memorial for Los Angeles County sheriff’s Sgt. Steve Owen at the Lancaster Sheriffs HQ Thursday morning.
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-year-old Levi Contreras with his father, Loren, leaves his hand written note “You are my HERO” at a growing memorial for L.A.County sheriff’s Sgt. Steve Owen, who died after he was shot while responding to a call about a residential burglary in Lancaster.
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Bishop Vaughn gets emotional as he talks about the deputy turning his life around at a growing memorial at the Lancaster Sheriffs Dept. for Sgt. Steve Owen, who died Wednesday after he was shot while responding to a call about a residential burglary.
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A hearse in a convoy of Sheriff’s patrol cars departs the Lancaster station enroute with family members to the Los Angeles County morgue.
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Tony Miano, a retired LA County Sheriff’s deputy, shakes hands with Jenny Acosta. who stopped to thank him for holding his sign at the corner at a growing memorial at the Lancaster Sheriffs HQ Thursday morning.
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Residents watch as a coroner’s van takes the body of Sheriff’s Sgt. Steve Owen from the Antelope Valley Medical Center to the county morgue.
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Antelope Valley residents gather at the Lancaster Sheriff’s Station to mourn the death of Sgt. Steve Owen, who was fatally shot by a robbery suspect on Wednesday.
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Law enforcement and Fire Department personnel transport the shooting suspect in Lancaster. (Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)
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Sheriff’s deputies and Antelope Valley residents gather at the Lancaster Sheriff’s Station to mourn the death of Sgt. Steve Owen, who was fatally shot by a robbery suspect on Wednesday.
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A child adds a candle to a memorial at the Lancaster Sheriff’s Station for Sheriff’s Sgt. Steve Owen.
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L.A. County sheriff’s deputies stand near the fatal shooting scene in Lancaster on Wednesday afternoon. (Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)
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Sgt. Steve Owen, shown in April 2015, was fatally wounded after responding to call of a residential burglary in Lancaster, authorities said.
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L.A. Sheriff’s Department SWAT team members stand down after the arrest of a suspect in the fatal shooting of Sgt. Steve Owen, a 29-year veteran of the L.A. County Sheriff’s Department.
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Sheriff’s deputies and medical personnel hug at the Antelope Valley Medical Center after the fatal shooting of Sgt. Steve Owen, a 29-year veteran of the L.A. County Sheriff’s Department.
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Sheriff’s deputies embrace in the parking lot of the Antelope Valley Medical Center after the fatal shooting of Sgt. Steve Owen, a 29-year veteran of the L.A. County Sheriff’s Department.
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Members of the L.A. County Sheriff’s Department SWAT team ride an armored vehicle down the street near the scene of a fatal shooting.
(Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times) Easily recognizable by his kind blue eyes and distinctive droopy mustache, Owen was a well-known presence in the Antelope Valley who was tough on criminals but also counseled them about how to better their lives. He had patrolled the rough urban neighborhoods, new subdivisions and rural lanes of the growing suburban community for more than two decades and lived in the area.
“When you first see him, here’s this big guy coming toward you. But when he talks to you, he’s very polite, sincere and genuine,” said Chief Bobby Denham, who worked with Owen for many years. “The bad guys, they knew him — they knew that he was fair and that he would take the time to talk to them, and they also knew that if they were out there committing crimes that he would arrest them.”
In his off time, Owen volunteered as a football coach and youth mentor. He also taught landlords and business owners how to reduce crime on their properties.
“He’s probably the most well-known law enforcement officer in the Antelope Valley as a result of everything he’s done here,” Denham said.
If he went into a house of a victim and there wasn’t food on the table, he’d put food on that table.
— Cmdr. Mike Parker, Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department
A passionate equestrian and father to two adult sons and one stepdaughter, Owen rode his horse in the Sheriff’s Department’s mounted detail. His wife, Tania, is a detective in the Sheriff’s Department’s arson and explosives detail.
He preferred working the streets to being promoted to a desk job. Colleagues described Owen as a mentor to generations of young sheriff’s deputies.
“He had compassion, he was hardworking and he didn’t back down from a fight,” said Cmdr. Mike Parker, through tears. “But he used the minimum force, and if he went into a house of a victim and there wasn’t food on the table, he’d put food on that table.”
After hearing the news about Owen, Sheriff Jim McDonnell rushed back from Hawaii, where he had attended a conference and was planning a short vacation.
The burglary suspect, a 27-year-old whose name has not been released, was shot and slightly wounded by the other deputy at the scene, then arrested in a nearby backyard.
At Antelope Valley Hospital, dozens of sheriff’s deputies gathered to pull for Owen and then to mourn his death.
Owen knew all those deputies on a first-name basis, said Lancaster Mayor R. Rex Parris.
“You could not find a more beloved law enforcement officer in this community,” Parris said.
At a vigil attended by hundreds of people Wednesday night, Owen was remembered as a man who always greeted others with a smile and a handshake.
“As a deputy, he took special pride to make sure his community was served,” said Darren Parker, former president of the county Human Relations Commission and a civil rights activist. “He truly believed in people.”
Parker said Owen could be spotted at various community events such as toy drives and PTA meetings, and wanted to be a “solid positive example” for the youth in the Antelope Valley.
Owen and several other deputies were awarded the Sheriff’s Department’s Medal of Valor for the 2013 carjacking and kidnapping incident.
As the deputies in that case confronted the suspect, who was wearing a bulletproof vest and pointing a handgun at the hostage, Owen drew on his decades of experience. He told the deputies to try Tasering the suspect rather than shooting him.
After the first Taser shot to the suspect’s arm, the hostage was able to escape. It took a second Taser shot to incapacitate the suspect.
“I would say he is somebody who is a cool head and able to remain calm even in the most challenging situations,” Denham said.
Owen made the news again recently as one of three deputies who found a dehydrated and overheated 13-month-old girl strapped in a car seat in a Palmdale shed in the midsummer heat.
“He’s remembered as a cop’s cop. He loved police work, helping people, putting bad people in jail, protecting people and catching the bad guy,” said Brian Moriguchi, president of the union that represents sheriff’s supervisors.
On a ride-along with a Times reporter and photographer last year, Owen showed his trademark mixture of street smarts and friendliness.
In pursuit of several young men he believed were up to no good, he drove his car onto a lawn in an apartment complex. He then apologized about a broken sprinkler to the apartment manager, whom he knew by name.
Familiar with every nook and cranny of his sprawling territory, he pointed toward an impoverished rural area where, he said, people lived without running water.
As he drove in the direction of Lake Los Angeles, he mentioned Deputy Stephen Sorensen, killed there in 2003 while responding to a call in an isolated area where backup would have been miles away.
Owen “is a legend out there,” said Capt. Steve Gross, who was Owen’s partner from 1999 to 2005, when both men were detectives in Lancaster. “He is truly the hardest-working deputy I have ever known.”
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