Tulare County deputy killed in ambush while serving eviction notice; suspect run over by armored vehicle

 April 12, 2026

A Tulare County sheriff's detective was shot and killed Thursday morning while serving a routine eviction notice in Porterville, California, after a suspect who had apparently been lying in wait opened fire on deputies in what became an hourslong standoff. The gunman, identified as David Eric Morales, was ultimately killed when a law enforcement armored vehicle ran him over.

Detective Randy Hoppert, a Navy veteran who joined the Tulare County Sheriff's Office in January 2020, was struck by gunfire during the initial ambush. He was transported to Sierra View District Hospital, where he died at 11:57 a.m., Tulare County Sheriff Mike Boudreaux said at a news conference afterward.

The killing marks yet another case of law enforcement officers facing lethal violence during what should be a straightforward civil duty, and raises hard questions about the risks deputies absorb every day in a state where political leaders spend far more energy worrying about the rights of people who break the law than about the safety of those who enforce it.

An eviction notice turned into a firefight

Morales had not paid rent for 35 days, Fox News Digital reported. Deputies arrived at his home in a Porterville cul-de-sac to serve a final eviction notice, a civil order of removal, nothing more. What they encountered was a prepared ambush.

Sheriff Boudreaux said Morales appeared to have been waiting for the deputies. AP News reported that Boudreaux told the press conference plainly:

"He laid in wait and immediately shot at officers when they arrived."

A neighbor's video, obtained by Fox News Digital, captured the standoff unfolding at approximately 10:40 a.m. Thursday. In the footage, officers can be heard shouting "Get down, get down" as heavy gunfire erupted in the residential neighborhood.

After the initial shooting, Morales barricaded himself inside his home. For hours, he continued to fire at deputies and assisting agencies working to contain the scene. He shot at law enforcement vehicles, tactical equipment, and even a drone, which Boudreaux said was hit out of the air.

Multiple tactical vehicles took gunfire during the prolonged standoff. Just The News reported that authorities believed Morales was armed with a high-powered rifle. The 59-year-old suspect refused to surrender.

Sheriff Boudreaux: 'He got what he deserved'

The standoff ended when a BearCat armored vehicle ran over Morales. Boudreaux was blunt about what happened and why. He told reporters:

"The situation was resolved, and the suspect is now dead. He was not shot. One of the BearCats ran over him and killed him."

Then the sheriff went further, delivering a message that left no room for ambiguity:

"Don't shoot at cops. You shoot at cops, we're going to run you over. He got run over. He got what he deserved."

In a media environment where law enforcement officials routinely hedge, equivocate, and issue lawyered-up statements, Boudreaux's words were a bracing departure. He described Morales as lying prone on the ground in camouflage clothing, still posing a threat, when the armored vehicle ended the standoff for good.

The pattern of officers being ambushed during routine duties has become disturbingly familiar to anyone paying attention to law enforcement news in recent years.

Who was Deputy Randy Hoppert?

Hoppert served as a Navy corpsman from 2010 to 2015 before joining the Tulare County Sheriff's Office on January 5, 2020. He had spent roughly five years in law enforcement at the time of his death. A photo caption identified him as a detective with the department.

Tulare County Chair Amy Shuklian issued a statement after the shooting:

"We offer our heartfelt sympathies to the family of our fallen Deputy and to the entire Tulare County Sheriff's Office. This profound loss underscores the inherent risks our first responders brave daily to ensure the safety of our community."

Those risks are real, and they are not abstract. Hoppert walked up to a door to hand a man a piece of paper. He was met with rifle fire.

The incident echoes other recent cases of targeted violence against police officers across the country, ambushes carried out against men and women performing duties that most Americans never think twice about.

'This is senseless'

Boudreaux captured the grim absurdity of the situation in a single line. As the New York Post reported, the sheriff said:

"This situation went from a civil order of removal to where our officer was shot and killed. This is senseless."

Senseless is the right word. A man 35 days behind on rent chose to turn a paper eviction notice into a lethal firefight. He dressed in camouflage. He armed himself with what authorities believed was a high-powered rifle. He waited. And when the deputies arrived to do their jobs, he opened fire.

The result: a Navy veteran and five-year law enforcement officer is dead. A family is shattered. A department is mourning. And the man responsible was crushed under the wheels of the very armored vehicle his gunfire forced into the neighborhood.

Incidents like this, and the recent shooting of an officer in New Hampshire during another violent encounter, remind the public that the phrase "routine call" is a fiction. No call is routine when any door can conceal someone who has decided that today is the day they start shooting.

The questions that remain

Several details remain unclear. Authorities have not disclosed the exact number of deputies present when the eviction notice was served. The specific firearm Morales used has not been publicly identified beyond the description of a high-powered rifle. The precise duration of the standoff, described only as lasting hours, has not been pinpointed. And no agency has yet identified which law enforcement unit operated the BearCat that ended the confrontation.

It is also unknown whether any other person was injured during the hours of sustained gunfire in a residential cul-de-sac. Neighbors were clearly in the area, at least one recorded the standoff on video.

What is known is that a man who owed 35 days of rent turned a civil process into a combat zone, and a detective who served his country in the Navy and then served his community in Tulare County paid the price.

The broader pattern of threats directed at law enforcement in California and nationwide deserves sustained attention, not just in the hours after a deputy's death, but in the policy choices that shape how officers are protected, supported, and remembered.

A sheriff who said what he meant

Sheriff Boudreaux will likely face criticism for his blunt remarks. In certain quarters, saying a man who ambushed and killed a deputy "got what he deserved" is considered unseemly. The critics can spare their lectures. Boudreaux spoke for the deputies who spent hours under fire, for the family of Randy Hoppert, and for every officer in America who pins on a badge knowing that a piece of paper in hand and a knock on a door can be the last thing they ever do.

When the people who enforce the law can't serve a simple eviction notice without being ambushed, the problem isn't policing. The problem is a society that has spent years undermining the authority of the badge and then acts surprised when someone decides the rules no longer apply to them.

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