General Real life Judge Dredd in Tennessee

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kvr28

I am the Greengo
Nov 22, 2015
9,579
14,174
Well a District Attorney really. Will be interesting to see where this story goes. I believe DA's in Tn are considered LEO. DeKalb county DA might want to freshen up on Tennessee vs Garner and point shooting.


The district attorney for Van Buren and Warren counties in Middle Tennessee has been indicted, the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation announced Monday afternoon.

A DeKalb County grand jury on Monday indicted 31st Judicial District Attorney General Christopher Robert Stanford on one count of reckless endangerment, according to the TBI. An employee at the DeKalb County Sheriff’s Office who answered the phone Monday afternoon confirmed the charge against Stanford and said it is a felony.

Stanford is accused of firing his weapon while trying to apprehend a man accused of triple homicide in Warren County, according to information from authorities.

The indictment, obtained by The Tennessean on Tuesday, states that Stanford "unlawfully, intentionally and recklessly" fired a handgun on Bell Street in Smithville, about 60 miles east of Nashville, on Nov. 21, 2024. A bullet shot through the wall of a home a woman and her three children were in, according to the indictment, but no one was injured.

The TBI said Stanford was in pursuit of a wanted fugitive when he fired his weapon. But the indictment states that there was "no immediate threat" to Stanford or others. The indictment further adds that Stanford "was not aiming the handgun, that he did not make use of the gun's sights but just held it out and shot."

Bryant Dunaway, the district attorney general for DeKalb County, said in a social media post that Stanford was after Caleb Brookins, who was wanted on arrest warrants in Warren County. After Brookins was apprehended, he and another suspect were booked into jail and charged with three counts of criminal homicide, according to a post from the Warren County Sheriff's Department.

The night of the shooting, Dunaway contacted TBI to investigate.


Stanford surrendered to authorities and was booked at the DeKalb County Jail at 12:29 p.m. Monday and was released at 12:52 p.m. after posting $10,000 for bail, the sheriff’s office employee said.

The 31st Judicial District Attorney General’s Office did not comment when reached by phone Monday afternoon.

Stanford has been district attorney for the 31st Judicial District, which prosecutes criminal cases in Van Buren and Warren counties, since 2022. He spent 15 years as a trial attorney and small business owner before that, according to his office’s website.

Stanford's first court hearing is 9 a.m. Jan. 7 in DeKalb County, the sheriff's office employee said Monday.

 
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Uncle Tom Doug

Official TMMAC Racist
Jun 24, 2022
1,281
2,044
Yeah, unfortunately, you can't just shoot at people because you're too slow to catch them. It's the #1 reason I'd never be a COP. I don't run.
 

kvr28

I am the Greengo
Nov 22, 2015
9,579
14,174
Yeah, unfortunately, you can't just shoot at people because you're too slow to catch them. It's the #1 reason I'd never be a COP. I don't run.
Tennessee vs Garner disagrees with you as well as most use of force policies across the country.

This is directly out of our state UOF policy

B. To effect an arrest or prevent the escape from arrest of a person when the law enforcement officer reasonably believes that the person has committed a crime involving the use or threatened use of deadly force, is using a dangerous weapon in attempting to escape or otherwise indicates that the person is likely to endanger seriously human life or to inflict serious bodily injury unless apprehended without delay; and

(1) The law enforcement officer has made reasonable efforts to advise the person that the officer is a law enforcement officer attempting to effect an arrest or prevent the escape from arrest and the officer has reasonable grounds to believe that the person is aware of this advice; or

(2) The law enforcement officer reasonably believes that the person to be arrested otherwise knows that the officer is a law enforcement officer attempting to effect an arrest or prevent the escape from arrest.
For purposes of this paragraph, "a reasonable belief that another has committed a crime involving use or threatened use of deadly force" means such reasonable belief in facts, circumstances and the law that, if true, would constitute such an offense by that person. If the facts and circumstances reasonably believed would not constitute such an offense, an erroneous but reasonable belief that the law is otherwise justifies the use of deadly force to make an arrest or prevent an escape. [PL 2007, c. 173, §23 (AMD).]


I have a reasonable belief you killed three people and are a threat to the general public, you are getting shot running away from me.