

Daniel Harmon-Wright, the officer accused in the shooting death of Patricia Ann Cook on Feb. 9, was terminated from the Culpeper Police Department on Tuesday, according to a news release from the town.
The termination occurred after the recent completion of an Internal Affairs investigation into the matter of the shooting of Cook, more than four months ago.
In the release, the town thanked the community for its patience through the process.
The 32-year-old former Culpeper police officer and Iraqi War veteran, who faces a murder charge, pleaded not guilty on June 8 in Culpeper County Circuit Court after spending 10 days in Fauquier County Detention Center.
Harmon-Wright, formerly Daniel Sullivan, of Gainesville, also faces three felony charges of malicious shooting into an occupied vehicle, malicious shooting into an occupied vehicle resulting in a death and use of a firearm in the commission of a felony in the death of Cook, 54, of Culpeper, a retired cosmetologist originally from Illinois. He requested a trial by jury.
Harmon-Wright is currently free on a $100,000 bond. Conditions of his release include not consuming or possessing alcohol or possessing guns, submitting to weekly drug and alcohol screenings, not leaving the state, wearing a GPS tracking device, and notifying the court of any change of address.
Harmon-Wright was hired August 2006, lasting nearly six years with the force.
Background
According to court documents, Cook had visited the parking lot at Epiphany Catholic School the preceding Monday, returning Thursday, Feb. 9. Cook attempted to enter the school and then was witnessed sitting alone in the driver’s side seat of her 2007 Jeep Wrangler, an expandable sun screen over the windshield.
Cook was allegedly advised by a school official that she was on private property, but apparently refused to leave.
When Harmon-Wright responded, Cook was alone and unarmed. He asked for her ID, which Cook displayed, but reportedly refused to hand over.
According to court documents, Harmon-Wright stated that when he reached inside the Jeep to take possession of Cook’s identification, she put the automobile in gear and slowly began to roll the vehicle forward while simultaneously rolling the driver’s door window up on his arm. The order to stop was given by Harmon-Wright, but reportedly, Mrs. Cook continued to roll the vehicle forward toward the exit of the parking lot.
During this time, the officer stepped onto the Jeep’s running board and continued to order her to stop. The vehicle came to a stop about 10 feet later, still in the parking lot, according to the commonwealth.
Harmon-Wright was seen jumping off the running board, “physically separating himself” from the vehicle.
The Jeep resumed rolling toward the exit, the sun screen still on the windshield. Witnesses observed the Jeep passing Harmon-Wright whereupon he ran forward to regain a position adjacent to the driver’s side window.
Upon nearing the door, the officer was reportedly seen grasping at the handle and side-view mirror. At or before the vehicle pulled out of the parking lot, and onto North East Street, Harmon-Wright fired twice into the driver’s door, the commonwealth wrote. Cook continued into the street traveling about five to 10 miles per hour.
Harmon-Wright allegedly fired his department-issued Glock seven times — two at the driver’s side window behind which Cook was sitting, striking her and inflicting non-fatal wounds. Harmon-Wright allegedly fired five more times as Cook attempted to drive away.
Harmon-Wright's attorney, Daniel Hawes of Broad Run, asserted his previous claim that his client was acting in self-defense after riding the Jeep's running board for 50 yards with Cook allegedly engaging in an alternating cycle of braking and accelerating, trying to cause him harm.
Cook’s husband, Gary Cook, filed a $5.35 million wrongful death lawsuit against Harmon-Wright last month.
Previous reprimands
During the court proceedings June 8, it was revealed that Harmon-Wright had previously been reprimanded while employed by the Culpeper Police Department.
In 2006, Harmon-Wright, then known as Daniel Sullivan, made misleading statements to staff regarding an injury he sustained while participating in defensive tactics training.
In January 2008, Sullivan received another written letter of reprimand regarding the officer’s response to a 2007 car accident.
On Jan. 9, 2012, Harmon-Wright was reprimanded for an excessive force violation involving the use of a firearm.
This most recent reprimand related to an Oct. 10, 2011 incident “where he forced his way into a local residence with his gun drawn and brandished the weapon at two occupants of the home,” according to Fauquier County Commonwealth’s Attorney Jim Fisher, special prosecutor in the Harmon-Wright case. At the time, the prosecutor said, Harmon-Wright lacked probable cause and a warrant to enter the home.
His mother, Bethany Sullivan, who also worked for the Culpeper town police as an administrative secretary for former Chief Daniel Boring, also faces six charges in her “role in forging public records in an attempt to purge Harmon-Wright’s personnel file of negative information.”
During last month’s press conference, Fisher told reporters that Sullivan faces three counts of uttering and three counts of forgery of public documents.