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Fort Myers police officer dies one week after being shot in head

Fort Myers police Officer Adam Jobbers-Miller died Saturday at Lee Memorial Hospital, a week after he was shot in the head while trying to apprehend a fleeing suspect.

FORT MYERS, Fla. – A Fort Myers police officer died Saturday a week after he was shot in the head while trying to apprehend a fleeing suspect.

Adam Jobbers-Miller, 29, had been a Fort Myers police officer since September 2015

"We lost him," police Capt. Jay Rodriguez said after a number of police cars suddenly raced to Lee Memorial Hospital around 6 p.m. Friday.

"It is with a heavy heart that we inform our community that Fort Myers Police Officer Adam Jobbers-Miller has passed away," police spokesman Mitch Haley wrote in an email release. "We ask that you continue to pray for Officer Jobbers-Miller’s family, friends and our entire Fort Myers Police Department family."

Fort Myers Police Officer Adam Jobbers-Miller. (Photo: Special to News-Press.com)

Jobbers-Miller had been in critical condition since Saturday night when he was wounded while chasing a suspect in the reported theft of a cellphone from a car at a Marathon Service Station.

Jobbers-Miller was the only officer injured during this incident. The suspect, Wisner Desmaret, was also injured and remains in custody at Lee Memorial Hospital.

"It’s a very low time right now for our city and for the Miller family," said Mayor Randall Henderson. "We need to stay intensely focused on the family and their support. This will serve as a reminder to us all – first responders, law enforcement officers face these challenges every day. We love them and respect them and at this time we embrace all of them."

Fort Myers Police Chief Derrick Diggs names Wisner Desmaret as the suspect in the shooting of Fort Myers Police Officer Adam Jobbers-Miller.

Fort Myers Police Chief Derrick Diggs names Wisner Desmaret as the suspect in the shooting of Fort Myers Police Officer Adam Jobbers-Miller. Andrew West

Under gray skies and a steady drizzle, dozens of police officers gathered and hugged each other in front of the auditorium at Lee Memorial Hospital as the somber news of Jobbers-Miller's death spread throughout Southwest Florida's law enforcement community.

Before moving to Florida to pursue a career as a police officer, Jobbers-Miller worked as a volunteer firefighter in Wayne, New Jersey, a small town about 20 miles from Midtown Manhattan.

On Friday evening in Wayne, the Fire Co. 2 house Jobbers-Miller once called home was packed for a vigil, as family and friends held candles and remembered the former township resident.

“When Adam joined (Co. 2) in 2009, it was an honor being his chief and to watch him grow into such a devoted, dedicated firefighter,” said Fire Co. 2 Chief John Gabriel said.

Jobbers-Miller feared nothing, said Gabriel. The drive and motivation led Jobbers-Miller and one of his sisters, another former Wayne volunteer firefighter, to join the Fort Myers Police Department.

A GoFundMe account established for Jobbers-Miller's family had reached more than $56,000 by Saturday night. Numerous local businesses have held or scheduled fundraisers and volunteers nearly overwhelmed Lee Health Blood Centers after it called for blood donations.

A 2017 mug shot of Wisner Desmaret (Photo: Sarasota County Sheriff's Office)

Desmaret, at 29, is the same age as Jobbers-Miller. But that may be the only thing the two men had in common.

Plagued by mental illness Desmaret was at one time a professional boxer who got his start with Fort Myers' Police Athletic League Academy.

A native of Haiti, Desmaret lived in Fort Myers at least from age 9, according to a 2008 News-Press profile. His first serious run-in with law enforcement, according to records from the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, was in 2002 when Desmaret was 13. He was arrested for burglary and larceny. He was arrested seven more times as a juvenile.

As an adult, Desmaret was arrested 16 times, most recently in Sarasota County. His record shows only one conviction, for a misdemeanor. Other cases were dropped, abandoned or dismissed often because Desmaret

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