Idaho Catholics unite in prayer for firefighters killed in sniper ambush

Gina Christian

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Law enforcement officers gather at Cherry Hill Park after multiple firefighters were attacked when responding to a fire in the Canfield Mountain area outside Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, June 29, 2025. Two firefighters were killed and at least one other was wounded when they were ambushed by sniper fire while responding to a blaze in a northern Idaho mountain community, as crews endured a barrage of gunfire over several hours that the governor called a "heinous" assault.
Law enforcement officers gather at Cherry Hill Park after multiple firefighters were attacked when responding to a fire in the Canfield Mountain area outside Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, June 29, 2025. Two firefighters were killed and at least one other was wounded when they were ambushed by sniper fire while responding to a blaze in a northern Idaho mountain community, as crews endured a barrage of gunfire over several hours that the governor called a “heinous” assault. OSV News photo/Young Kwak, Reuters

An Idaho pastor told OSV News his parish turned to prayer and Eucharistic adoration, following a deliberate and deadly attack on first responders.

Two firefighters were killed and a third wounded after a man began shooting at them like a sniper as they responded to a June 29 blaze on Canfield Mountain, located just over 4 miles from Coeur d’Alene, Idaho.

Authorities believe the now-deceased gunman — whose cause of death remains undisclosed, and who has been identified by The Associated Press as Wess Roley — deliberately started the fire to attack the first responders. A motive has not yet been specified.

That same evening, faithful gathered at St. Pius X Church in Coeur d’Alene for a Holy Hour dedicated to first responders, ahead of a regularly scheduled 6 p.m. Mass.

“What else can you do but double down on our faith and our connection with each other?” said Father Len MacMillian, pastor of St. Pius X. “I loved how people wanted to gather and to pray.”

The injured first responder is “a close friend of two of our parishioners,” he noted.

Father MacMillan said the trauma of the shootings “kind of felt like 9/11 again, a heartbreak.”

“There’s so much anger in the world, in the United States,” he said. “What we don’t need is more anger.”

Instead, said Father MacMillan, “what we need is hearts that have been pierced.”

The tragedy “reminds me of when Christ says, ‘Blessed are those who mourn,'” said Father MacMillan, quoting Matthew 5:4. “Those who are mourning the loss (from) injury and of life, and children (who) are going to find out their father’s not returning home. Wives are going to find out (their husbands are gone).”

With the weight of such sorrow, he said, “why wouldn’t I let my heart be broken and pour out with prayer?”

In the end, he said, “getting angry is not going to help. A broken heart will.”

And, Father MacMillan said, “when a community prays together, that’s what we can do. It’s not a solution, but it’s a better way of life.”

Gina Christian is a multimedia reporter for OSV News.

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