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On November 21, 2025, Indian River County Deputy Terri Sweeting-Mashkow was killed in the line of duty, with another deputy and a locksmith injured, and the suspect, Michael Halberstam, left in critical condition after a shootout, Fox News reported.
Sweeting-Mashkow, 47, had dedicated 25 years and 16 days to the Indian River County Sheriff’s Office, starting as a dispatcher before spending two decades on patrol.
She transitioned to the legal process civil unit in 2023, taking on duties like serving eviction notices—routine work that turned deadly on this fateful day.
The incident unfolded at a residence in Bermuda Club, a gated community in Vero Beach, where a mother sought to evict her son, identified as Halberstam.
Deputies arrived with a locksmith to execute the court order, only to be met with gunfire as Halberstam allegedly grabbed a weapon and opened fire in the entryway.
Another deputy took a bullet to the shoulder but is on the mend, while the locksmith remains in critical condition after undergoing surgery.
Halberstam, too, was critically wounded when deputies returned fire, ending the violent exchange that shattered a quiet neighborhood.
This wasn’t the first trouble at this address—sheriff’s deputies had responded to seven calls this month alone, mostly from Halberstam’s mother, culminating in the eviction decision.
Halberstam’s past includes a 2006 narcotics charge and a 2015 misdemeanor assault charge from Virginia, raising questions about why such volatility was left to fester until it exploded.
Sweeting-Mashkow’s death marks only the second line-of-duty fatality in the 100-year history of the Indian River County Sheriff’s Office, a grim milestone for a tight-knit force.
Sheriff Eric Flowers captured the raw pain of the moment, saying, “What an awful day. Six days before Thanksgiving.”
Flowers added, “The regular duties that our deputies bravely do every day in and out, and today Deputy Terri Sweeting-Mashkow, 25 years of service, 47 years old, gave her life for this community.” His words sting with truth—law enforcement faces risks daily, often in tasks as mundane as delivering paperwork, while progressive policies sometimes tie their hands in dealing with repeat offenders.
Florida Governor Ron DeSantis has noted that his office is closely monitoring the situation, a reminder that leadership must step up when those who protect us fall.
While some might rush to sympathize with Halberstam’s plight, let’s not forget the real victim here—a deputy who served honorably for a quarter-century, only to be gunned down in a moment of senseless violence. This isn’t about woke narratives of systemic failure; it’s about personal responsibility and the cost of chaos. Sweeting-Mashkow’s sacrifice demands we prioritize law and order over endless excuses.



