Howard Sye Shot and Killed by Police Following Essex Stabbing Call, State Investigators Say

On the evening of December 3, 2025, a routine family-disturbance call in Essex, Maryland, escalated into a fatal police shooting that has left a community reeling. The deceased has now been identified as 31-year-old Howard Sye of Essex — an unemployed auto mechanic known by neighbors and family for being handy with cars.

According to the Independent Investigations Division (IID) of the Maryland Office of the Attorney General, officers from the Baltimore County Police Department responded around 8:30 p.m. to the 900 block of Holgate Drive after a 911 call reported a stabbing. On arrival, officers encountered Sye armed with a knife inside the apartment building. Multiple officers gave verbal commands, but when those orders failed — the man allegedly “moved quickly” — several discharged their weapons. Sye was struck and later died at a nearby hospital.


Inside the apartment, officers found a woman with apparent stab wounds. She was rushed to a hospital and is reported to be recovering. A knife was recovered at the scene. One officer was also injured during the incident and treated at a local hospital; details on the nature of the injury haven’t been released.

By Thursday afternoon, the IID publicly named Sye and the four officers involved: Officers Malia Hooper (one year of service), Trent LaPosta (one year), First Class Officer Nicholas Vagnier (two years), and Hunter Cortes (two years), all part of the department’s Operations Bureau.

Neighbors described a chaotic scene. One, who asked not to be named, recalled hearing a long argument earlier that evening. “There were doors slamming back and forth, a couple of f-you’s exchanged,” the neighbor recounted. Moments later, he heard a female officer say, “Hey — talk to me,” followed by shouts of “Put the knife down.” Within seconds, gunfire erupted.

Sye’s brother, distraught and angered, demanded accountability. According to him, Howard had mental-health struggles and should not have been shot so quickly. “If the protocol was followed, he’d be alive,” he said, calling the officers’ response over-reactive.

The IID has launched an investigation into the shooting. All officers involved were wearing body-worn cameras; footage is expected to be reviewed and possibly released within 20 business days, unless delayed by witness interviews or procedural necessities.

For now, a family is grieving. A community is questioning. And state investigators are digging in — seeking answers about what really happened that December night in Essex.

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