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Back in the saddle again
 
masraum's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: Central TX west of Houston
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Good Guys 1 - Numbnuts - 00

Wow, this is messed up.

Cop gets a gun in his face and the guy pulls the trigger. Luckily, the guy had an empty chamber or fired casing in the gun so the first shot just goes "click".

Video
Video : Coroner

The rest of the story.
Coroner

Quote:
HAMILTON — A coroner’s jury ruled Tuesday that Hamilton Police Officer Ross Jessop was justified in shooting Raymond Thane Davis to death after the Hamilton man opened fire during a late night traffic stop in January.

It took the six-woman jury one hour to make its ruling following nearly five hours of testimony, which included a videotape that showed Davis pointing a pistol inches from Jessop’s face and pulling the trigger.

The click of the revolver’s hammer hitting a previously fired round was audible on the tape.

Davis fired a second time as the officer fell back and drew his own weapon.

Jessop fired his pistol 14 times into Davis’ vehicle as it sped away. One round hit the man in the back. Davis, 36, died on the scene.

His .41 caliber revolver was recovered on the floorboard. Its hammer was cocked and ready to fire.

Witnesses testified Tuesday Davis’ taste for whiskey and a bad case of jealousy were to blame for the fatal confron-tation.

Shannon Diaz, bar manager at Hamilton’s Office and Silver Coin Casino, said Davis was acting strange enough on the evening of Jan. 1 that she wouldn’t serve alcohol to him.

"He was completely not like himself ... when he starts drinking whiskey, he just completely turns into a different person," Diaz said.

She told him he needed to leave.

Davis returned later and found Diaz, his girlfriend and another man sitting outside. The man, who is black, had loaned Davis’ girlfriend his coat.

That set Davis off, Diaz said.

He shouted racial epithets and later texted the same to his girlfriend. When he returned to the bar, Diaz had bounc-ers and her husband put him out.

She said later someone received a text message saying Davis had a gun.

Tracy Womack, owner of the Ponderosa Bar, said Davis was fine when she first saw him around 9 p.m., but she knew he’d been fighting with his girlfriend when he came back later.

"He was drinking Black Velvet cokes," Womack said. "I also saw him do a snakebite Yukon Jack with Rose’s Lime juice."

When Davis’ girlfriend came back to the bar later, she asked to hide behind the bar.

"She sat on a little stool ... she didn’t want him to see her," Womack said.

He spotted her the second time he came back and started yelling racial epithets at her again about wearing the man’s jacket. Womack told him to leave.

"I knew I needed to protect her and get him gone," she said.

Davis moved to the Rainbow Bar where he continued to drink whiskey and Cokes.

The bartender there, Nicholas Renzo, remembered wrapping up Davis’ hand, which was bleeding.

"He said he hit a wall or something ... anyone who knows him, knows he shouldn’t drink whiskey," Renzo testified. "He gets violent."

He told Renzo later he had a gun. Just before Davis got ready to leave that night at about 1:30 a.m., he looked at Renzo and told him "It was nice knowing you. I’m not going to see you for awhile."

Renzo said he thought was the alcohol talking.

Davis told another patron at the Rainbow Bar the same story.

After saying "it was a pleasure knowing you," Brian Webb said Davis took his hand and placed it on the small of his back. Webb said he felt the outline of a pistol.

"He was definitely three sheets to the wind," Webb said.

Jessop was raised in Pinesdale. He is a 2001 Corvallis graduate who has been working with the Hamilton Police De-partment since 2008.

On Jan. 1, he came on shift at 4:45 p.m. He was scheduled to get off work 10 hours later at 2:45 a.m.

Jessop first saw Davis that night talking to two Hamilton police officers.

The men were questioning Davis about some battery cables that had been cut on his girlfriend’s car earlier that night. Jessop saw Davis shake the officers’ hands and go back inside.

The officers told Jessop that Davis was heavily intoxicated and had been warned not to drive.

Not long afterward, Jessop spotted Davis’ Lincoln Navigator driving north on Second Street. He pulled in behind and followed the vehicle as it turned on Adirondack Street. When Davis used a turn lane to drive straight through the next intersection, Jessop turned on his lights.

Davis crossed the railroad tracks on Fairgrounds Road and pulled over on a patch of dirt almost directly across from the fairgrounds entrance.

Jessop activated his spotlight.

And then the officer saw something that he’d never seen before during a traffic stop. Davis reached out and slowly adjusted his mirror so he could see the officer.

"That’s very unusual," Jessop testified. "Our spotlights are very bright and they hurt your eyes."

Most people immediately turn their mirrors so the light is reflected away from their face.

"At that point, I was caught off guard," he said. "I approached with a little more caution than I usually do."

Jessop could smell the alcohol on Davis as soon as he neared the window. He asked the man how much he’d drank that night.

"Plenty," came the reply.

Jessop said the face that stared out the window that night was hard to describe.

"It was argumentative ... very sure of himself, almost cocky."

Jessop asked him what he meant by plenty. A split second later the officer was staring down the barrel of a .41 mag-num Smith and Wesson pistol.

"The end looked bigger than a quarter," Jessop said.

Jessop heard a click.

Davis pulled the trigger and the hammer fell on an empty round.

"My very first thought ... after I realized it was a revolver was I was terrified. Absolutely terrified," Jessop testified. "I recall thinking I wasn’t going to see my wife again. I wasn’t going to see my mom, my brothers, or my sisters, or my coworkers or my dogs. I was terrified."

Jessop moved his face away from the threat as fast as he could.

"I did hear the click," he said. "I remember stopping. I was actually hoping it was just a joke ... I remember thinking why would you do that to an officer?"

And then he saw Davis’ head readjust.

"I remember thinking the reason he’s readjusting his head is he’s going to shoot again," Jessop said.

He ran toward the back of Davis’ vehicle, while drawing his Glock, Model 22.

He heard a gunshot.

"My next thought was I had to defend myself and eliminate the threat to me," Jessop said. "I don’t recall drawing my weapon. I do remember my first shot. I was conscious that I was shooting my gun."

Jessop thought he’d fired seven or eight rounds. It turned out he’d fired 14.

Six bullets hit Davis’ vehicle, including the one that drove through the passenger and driver’s seats and into Davis’ back.

After Davis’ vehicle stuck the power company’s building and came to a stop, Jessop loaded his rifle and got in his car and moved closer.

Ravalli County Attorney George Corn asked him why after he’d just been nearly killed did he move closer to his as-sailant.

"My duty as an officer is to make sure the community is safe," Jessop said. "I had no idea if I hit him or not. My thought was to get close enough to keep the area safe and keep myself safe."

Davis was dead when he was pulled from his vehicle by officers soon afterward.

The investigation of the shooting was completed by the Missoula Police Department. The investigative team all tes-tified Tuesday. John Pohle, the Powell County Coroner presided over the inquest.

Missoula Police Department Lt. Steve Brester led the investigation.

This wasn’t the first time Davis had been on the wrong side of the law, Brester said.

In 1998, he was convicted of felony aggravated battery in Idaho after he beat his ex-girlfriend’s boyfriend after she claimed she’d been abused. Witnesses in that case said he kicked the man 20 to 30 times while he was on the ground. When Davis heard the man making a gurgling sound, he went back and stomped on his face eight or nine more times.

He was convicted in 2003 of assaulting a Hamilton Police Officer and sent back to prison.

At the end of the hearing, Corn called Brester back to the stand one last time.

By now, Jessop was sitting in the front row, flanked by his fellow officers. His wife was sitting a row back and other supporters filled the courtroom.

Corn wanted Brester’s professional opinion: Was it necessary for Officer Jessop to shoot Davis?

"My opinion is that Mr. Davis purposely put his .41 magnum into the face of Officer Jessop with the intention of kill-ing him," Brester replied. "Officer Jessop had no choice but to respond with lethal force."

The jury agreed unanimously.

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Old 02-15-2011, 06:04 PM
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The Unsettler
 
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I remember that shooting.

That a bunch of people had to waste their time on deciding whether or not that was a justified shoot is stupid.
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Old 02-15-2011, 06:19 PM
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This story sounds familar. Didn't it happen several years ago?

Stiill, it's an interesting read.
Old 02-15-2011, 08:08 PM
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"O"man(are we in trouble)
 
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I love a story w/ a happy ending.
Old 02-16-2011, 03:22 AM
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.41 magnum, eh? You don't meet many drunken lunatics who buy ammo anywhere other than Wal-mart.

Good riddance. Sounds like this oxygen thief had it coming for several years.
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Old 02-16-2011, 06:51 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by widgeon13 View Post
I love a story w/ a happy ending.
Yep. Just perfect.
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Old 02-16-2011, 07:57 AM
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Lucky cop.
Old 02-16-2011, 08:24 AM
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I took 1 hour for the jury to make their testimony? I hope they were just chatting.. IMO this is a no-brainer!
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Old 02-16-2011, 11:17 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Oracle View Post
I took 1 hour for the jury to make their testimony? I hope they were just chatting.. IMO this is a no-brainer!
I think it was an all women jury.
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Old 02-16-2011, 11:24 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Oracle View Post
I took 1 hour for the jury to make their testimony? I hope they were just chatting.. IMO this is a no-brainer!
They had to at least take time to have lunch and make it look like they were really looking at the case. This one should have taken about 5 minutes, the time to fill out the paperwork.

Joe A
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Old 02-16-2011, 11:30 AM
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yep, 6 women jury. (Well played by the defendant lawyer!)

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Old 02-16-2011, 11:32 AM
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