The family of the deputy U.S. marshal who was shot and killed in Tucson has been given a $100,000 donation to help pay off their mortgage.
The Tunnel to Towers Foundation, which helps families of fallen first responders, announced the donation at a news conference Wednesday morning. The foundation is asking people both locally and nationwide to donate the rest so the family can own their home outright by Christmas.
White, 41, was fatally shot last Thursday night while helping to serve a felony arrest warrant on Ryan Schlesinger, 26, who is accused of killing him. White had worked for the Marshals Service since 2015 and was also an Air Force reservist who had been scheduled to deploy just a few days after his death.
The foundationβs chairman and CEO, Frank Siller, said when his group heard a deputy marshal had been killed in the line of duty, it had an obligation to help.
βEvery time something like this happens, itβs not only our duty as a foundation, but the communityβs duty to step up and do something,β Siller said during the press conference on the lawn of the Tucson Police Department main station.
White leaves behind his wife, Sue Ellen White, and four children, ages 7 to 14. Sue Ellen, who attended the press conference, was moved to tears when Siller announced the donation.
Whiteβs mother, the Rev. Lynnda White, told attendees her son had a lifelong tradition of giving to his community, ever since his fourth-grade teacher had tasked him with helping his classmates read as a young child.
Lynnda said her son was his familyβs hero and planned to keep them in their βforever home.β
Reverend Lynnda White, the mother of U.S. Marshal Deputy Chase White, pauses for a moment as she talks about her fallen son during a press conference at the Peace Officers Memorial at the Tucson Police Department 270 S. Stone Ave., on December 05, 2018. The Tunnel to Towers Foundation has pledged to help raise money to pay off the mortgage of Chase Whiteβs home through their Fallen First Responders Home Program.
βWith donations from the public and with the help of Tunnel to Towers, you will be helping my sonβs dear family stay in a home,β she said, holding back tears. βYouβll be helping them not have to worry.β
The Siller siblings founded Tunnel to Towers after their brother, firefighter Stephen Siller, was killed responding to the south Twin Tower during 9/11.
Siller said the foundation was born out of his little brotherβs sacrifice. And now, heβs petitioning for individuals to donate to the White family. He suggested giving up buying one holiday gift in favor of putting those funds toward a donation.
βLet us all make a promise here today that when any of our first responders give their kiss goodbye to their families, to their wives, to their children and they donβt come home, that we come together as a community and we take care of their families,β he said.
The money Tunnel to Towers donates to families all comes from donations, with 100 percent of the funds going directly to the family. Siller says oftentimes, raising enough to pay off a familyβs mortgage take one to six months, but in this case, he hopes to accomplish the goal in a few weeks.
Frank Siller and his siblings created the Tunnel to Towers Foundation after their brother, a firefighter, lost his life on 9/11.
Foundation spokesperson Trevor Tamsen says the group is not releasing the exact amount of the mortgage, but any extra raised will go directly to the family. He said first responders are often the family breadwinner, and covering this expense allows the family to grieve without also worrying about losing their home.
White was the first deputy marshal killed in the line of duty in Tucson in 66 years, Mayor Jonathan Rothschild said at the press conference. He said more discussion about what caused this tragedy will come another day after the community comes together to help the White family.
βThe entire city is heartbroken at the loss of a dedicated law enforcement officer, an Air Force reservist, a husband, a father and a son,β he said.
Tucson Police Chief Chris Magnus said raising this money is an opportunity to make something good out of a tragedy.
βI hope that we can come together as a community, as a region, to appreciate this tremendous sacrifice and to show our thanks.β
Photos: Deputy US marshal killed in the line of duty in Tucson
Deputy U.S. Marshal killed in the line of duty
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Deputy U.S. Marshal Chase White was shot and killed serving a search warrant in Tucson on Nov. 29, 2018.
Deputy U.S. Marshal killed in the line of duty
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David Gonzales, U.S. marshal for the District of Arizona, and Elizabeth Strange, acting U.S. attorney for the District of Arizona, embrace at Fridayβs news conference about the shooting death of Deputy Marshal Chase White.
Deputy U.S. Marshal killed in the line of duty
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David Gonzales, US Marshal, District of Arizona speaks during the U.S. Marshals Service press conference about the shooting death of Deputy U.S. Marshal Chase White at the Evo A. DeConcini U.S. Courthouse on November 30, 2018. Behind him is Timothy Hughes, Chief Deputy US Marshal, District of Arizona.
Deputy U.S. Marshal killed in the line of duty
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Deputy Chief Chad Kasmar, Tucson Police Department, discusses the shooting death of Deputy U.S. Marshal Chase White at the Evo A. DeConcini U.S. Courthouse in in Tucson, AZ on November 30, 2018.
Deputy U.S. Marshal killed in the line of duty
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Tucson police served an order to Ryan Schlesinger to get him to take a mental-health evaluation in August 2017 at the same home where Deputy U.S. Marshal Chase White was killed Thursday.
Deputy U.S. Marshal killed in the line of duty
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In addition to sending emails to officers, Ryan Schlesinger sent threatening emails to a Pima Community College administrator who had placed him on probation in March 2017.
Deputy U.S. Marshal killed in the line of duty
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A Tucson Police Department investigator, right, talks to another law enforcement officer at the scene where Deputy U.S. Marshal Chase White was shot and killed while serving a felony arrest warrant Thursday evening outside a Tucson house on the north side.Β
Deputy U.S. Marshal killed in the line of duty
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A Tucson Police Department officer sits in his patrol car at the scene where a deputy U.S. marshal serving a felony arrest warrant was shot and killed Thursday evening outside a Tucson house on the north side.
Deputy U.S. Marshal killed in the line of duty
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Tucson Police Officers stand by a police car withΒ Ryan Schlesinger detained in the back seat on November 29, 2018 in Tucson, AZ.
Deputy U.S. Marshal killed in the line of duty
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Tucson police officers stand by a police car withΒ Ryan Schlesinger detained in the back seat after a shooting that killed Deputy U.S. Marshal Chase White. It had been 66 years since a deputy U.S. marshal was killed in the line of duty in Tucson.
Deputy U.S. Marshal killed in the line of duty
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A Tucson Police Department Officer stands by his police car outside the house where Ryan Schlesinger is holed up following a shooting on November 29, 2018 in Tucson, AZ.



