Corporal Donald Lee Mauldin

Corporal Donald Lee Mauldin

Pinal County Sheriff's Office, Arizona

End of Watch Saturday, August 24, 2002

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Donald Lee Mauldin

Corporal Don Mauldin succumbed to gunshot wounds received nine years earlier while he and other deputies attempted to arrest a convicted felon.

On December 11, 1993, at 3:40 p.m., Corporal Mauldin and another deputy responded to a domestic service call at the 2800 block of South Gila Road in Apache Junction when a female reported that her husband had threatened to shoot her. Once the deputies attempted to enter the home, the subject fired at Corporal Mauldin and his partner, striking them both in the head. Responding deputies returned fire, injuring the suspect with non-life-threatening wounds.

The other deputy was transported to Scottsdale Memorial Hospital-Osborn with a minor wound. The bullet had ricocheted off his glasses, hitting him in his cheek.

Corporal Mauldin was transported to St. Joseph's Hospital and Medical Center, where he was determined to be brain-dead, but after nine days, he woke up. He was confined to the hospital until succumbing to his injury on August 24, 2002.

The suspect, whose parole had just expired, was convicted of five counts of aggravated assault, two counts of attempted first-degree murder, one count of attempted second-degree murder, three counts of endangerment, five counts of misconduct involving a weapon, and one count each of possession of drug paraphernalia and possession of dangerous drugs. He was sentenced to 145 years in prison.

Corporal Mauldin had served with the Pinal County Sheriff's Department for seven years and previously served with the South Tucson Police Department and the Gila County Sheriff's Office. He is survived by his wife and two children.

Bio

  • Age 60
  • Tour 19 years
  • Badge 268

Incident Details

  • Cause Gunfire
  • Incident Date Saturday, December 11, 1993
  • Weapon Handgun; .357 caliber
  • Offender Sentenced to 145 years

arrest attempt, convicted felon

Most Recent Reflection

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Donnie Lee. We both were employed as officers at the Superior PD, you a Sargent and I was badge 4. 1977. I was an inexperienced, new to the concept of being a police officer. I learned a lot from you and though you, understood the term of "Brother." We were like family and when you went back to Texas to a job it was painful to see you leave. Don liked to jump from department to department, in Texas and Arizona, so he wasn't gone very long before he came back to Arizona, eventually landed in and working for Pinal County Sheriff and back into our friendship. By then I was an Arizona Highway Patrol Officer. I remember when I received the news of his death. I was at a squad Christmas party. My Sargent broke the news to me and asked if I would be okay and offered me a couple of days off. I new Dons wife as she and her family lived in my patrol area, Winkelman Arizona. I visited her during this time of grief. I believe Don was my brother and we were very close and his loss cut deeply, still to this day. Now my career ended in 2000, but my memories of service are still with me as you are too, brother. I only wish you could have shared the past 25 years. Your brother in service. Darrell D. Murray, 3032 Officer III AZDPS

Officer III AZDPS Retired Darrell D. Mur
AZ DPS Friend and shared service at Superior PD

December 21, 2025

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