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Criminal Justice

Cops Shoot Fire Chief in Courtroom Scuffle After His Speed Trap Complaints

Posted Sep 4, 2009 5:39 AM CST
By Debra Cassens Weiss

A fire chief who went to court to complain about a speed trap in Jericho, Ark., ended up with a bullet in his hip after he got in a scuffle with police at the hearing and one of them fired his gun.

The fight broke out during Fire Chief Don Payne’s second court appearance over traffic tickets in one day, the Associated Press reports. Earlier in the day, Payne failed to get a traffic ticket dismissed. When police issued a new ticket to either Payne or his son, the fire chief returned to court to protest. The scuffle broke out when an argument escalated between Payne and the seven police officers who attended the hearing. Payne was shot from behind.

Jericho residents told AP their town is known for the large number of tickets given to motorists on the main highway there. But the shooting has changed the status quo.

“Now the police chief has disbanded his force ‘until things calm down,’ a judge has voided all outstanding police-issued citations and sheriff's deputies are asking where all the money from the tickets went. With 174 residents, the city can keep seven police officers on its rolls but missed payments on police and fire department vehicles and saw its last business close its doors a few weeks ago.”

Prosecutor Lindsey Fairley told AP he doesn’t plan to file any felony charges against the officer, who was not identified, or Payne. He said he didn't remember the name of the officer who fired the shot.

Comments

1.

Steve
Sep 4, 2009 6:34 AM CST

Most police are nothing more than glorified traffic cops who write tickets.  They shouldn’t even have a gun.

2.

Bill
Sep 4, 2009 6:40 AM CST

“He said he didn’t remember the name of the officer who fired the shot.”

Riiiiiiiiiiiiiiight.

Lemme guess: Barney Fife.

3.

B. McLeod
Sep 4, 2009 8:29 AM CST

Sounds like Don Payne fit the battle o’ Jericho, and the speedtrap come atumblin’ down,

4.

Kurt Warner
Sep 4, 2009 8:57 AM CST

“With 174 residents, the city can keep seven police officers on its rolls but missed payments on police and fire department vehicles and saw its last business close its doors a few weeks ago.”

So with no other business in town, the Court has become the only revenue generating enterprise left and it’s method of collection and enforcement includes using the town’s police officers to shoot those who complain.  Welcome to a world devoid of private enterprise which has been gobbled up or destroyed by expansive and intrusive government as the only provider of goods and services left standing.  The future of America in microcosm unless expansive socialist thinking is challenged and we demand sever reduction in the size of government and the scope of its intrusion into the lives of ordinary citizens and its continuing erosion of free enterprise and personal responsibility.

5.

SJS
Sep 4, 2009 9:35 AM CST

This is just like Kendleton, Texas - small town that lived on ticket revenue, then eventually went bankrupt.  There’s got to be a balance - speeding is illegal, after all, but 7 cops for 174 citizens?  Really?

6.

Sam
Sep 4, 2009 10:01 AM CST

Seven police officers cannot defend themselves against one unarmed man so they shoot him in the back?  This sounds just a little excessive to me.

7.

Dr Phun
Sep 4, 2009 10:17 AM CST

The town has a real problem if the police can’t get along with the Fire Dept.  They often go to the same incidents.

8.

B. McLeod
Sep 5, 2009 10:12 PM CST

Someday when there is a fire a the police station, the fire crews may all be out somewhere, checking the speedometers on their engines.

9.

fed up
Sep 6, 2009 4:39 PM CST

RE #4, the good manufacturing jobs that previously kept small towns alive are now in Mexico, China, or elsewhere.  The blame goes to Wall Street, corporations, and trial lawyers, not government, except that part of government bought with donations by corporations and trial lawyers.  Ironically, legal services will soon be outsourced to China and India.  Gonna blame big government for that too?

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