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Massachusetts Officer Tried for Allegedly Aiming Gun at Colleague Before Being Shot

In Essex Superior Court, former North Andover, Massachusetts, police officer Kelsey Fitzsimmons is facing a bench trial on a charge of assault with a dangerous weapon after a June 25, 2025 confrontation at her home in which she was shot by fellow Officer Patrick Noonan while he served her with a restraining order. Prosecutors say Fitzsimmons retrieved her service weapon, pointed it at Noonan and pulled the trigger, but the gun did not fire because there was no round in the chamber, and argue Noonan’s training and that stroke of luck are the only reasons he is alive. The defense counters that Fitzsimmons, then 28 and a new mother, was suicidal and suffering postpartum depression, insisting she pointed the gun at herself and that officers’ shouted pleas of "Kelsey, don’t do it" show they believed she was a danger only to herself, not to them. The standoff ended when Noonan fired three shots, striking Fitzsimmons in the chest after two initial rounds missed as she stepped backward, according to the prosecution’s account. The case, which began with more serious attempted-murder charges later reduced by a grand jury, highlights unresolved tensions in U.S. policing over how officers respond when one of their own is in a mental health crisis, especially during volatile domestic and restraining-order calls.

Police Use of Force and Misconduct Courts and Criminal Justice

📌 Key Facts

  • Incident occurred June 25, 2025 at Fitzsimmons’ North Andover home as officers served a restraining order obtained by her fiancé requiring no contact with her child and surrender of her weapons.
  • Grand jury reduced earlier charges of armed assault with intent to murder and multiple assault-with-a-dangerous-weapon counts to a single assault-with-a-dangerous-weapon charge now being tried to a judge.
  • Prosecutors allege Fitzsimmons pointed her service weapon at Officer Patrick Noonan and pulled the trigger with no round chambered; the defense says she was attempting suicide amid postpartum depression and never threatened officers.

📊 Relevant Data

About 1 in 8 women with a recent live birth reported symptoms of postpartum depression in the United States.

Symptoms of Depression Among Women | Reproductive Health — CDC

Women make up approximately 12% of sworn police officers in the United States.

March: Women in Policing — Policing Institute

Female police officers face disproportionately higher risks of anxiety, depression, and sleep disturbances compared to male officers.

Exploring gender differences in policing: the role of workplace social support — Oxford Academic

The annual suicide rate among law enforcement officers in the United States averaged 21.4 per 100,000 from 2016 to 2022, with male officers showing significantly higher rates than female officers.

Unveiling the silent battle: Suicide rates among law enforcement personnel in the United States (2016-2022) — CrimRxiv

Precarious working conditions, including lack of job security, control, flexibility, or maternal leave, are associated with an increased risk of maternal postpartum depression.

Precarious working conditions and psychosocial work stress act as a risk factor for symptoms of postpartum depression during maternity leave: results from a longitudinal cohort study — PMC

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