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Raw: Okla. Officer with body cam Shoots Gun Instead of Taser


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The AP piece glosses over several key facts.

 

First, the officer who did the shooting is a 73-year-old reserve deputy whose other job is as the president of his own insurance brokerage company. He does the reserve deputy duty as a side effort.

 

Second, the victim in the shooting - the guy who died - apparently was unarmed but was fleeing a sting in which he sold a handgun to undercover officers. The man was also under charges for sale of methamphetamine.

 

Here is the bulk of the story from the Tulsa World web site:

 

 

A 73-year-old reserve deputy who shot and killed a fleeing suspect Thursday during an undercover operation believed he was holding a Taser, not a gun, when the shooting occurred.

 

The reserve deputy who shot the man is Robert Charles Bates, a Tulsa insurance company executive who was working undercover Thursday as a member of the Tulsa County Sheriff’s Office Violent Crimes Task Force.

 

Bates confirmed in a phone interview with a Tulsa World reporter Friday that he shot and killed Eric Courtney Harris the previous day.

 

“It was me,” Bates said during the interview. “My attorney has advised me not to comment. As much as I would like to, I can’t.”

 

The Sheriff’s Office on Friday evening released Bates’ name and said he received his reserve status in September 2008.

 

The release states that Bates was assigned to the Tulsa County Violent Crimes Task Force and had received specialized training in homicide investigation, meth lab identification and decontamination, and other specialized training.

 

Bates had also spent time with the Tulsa Police Auxiliary and then as a full-time police officer, according to the release.

 

Bates, who owns an insurance company, served as chairman of the Re-elect Sheriff (Stanley) Glanz Committee in 2012 and donated $2,500 to Glanz’s campaign that year.

Records show Bates has held an insurance brokers license since 1966 to sell property, life, health and accident insurance. His license expires in 2016.

 

Harris fled arrest Thursday and was involved in an altercation with another deputy when he was shot, Maj. Shannon Clark said. Clark said in a release Friday that Harris had come to the attention of the Sheriff’s Office during an investigation into methamphetamine distribution.

 

Harris sold meth to undercover investigators and said he had access to guns, as well, Clark said in the release. On Thursday, Harris met a task force member in the parking lot of a Dollar General at 1906 N. Harvard Ave. to sell him a 9 mm semi-automatic pistol and ammunition, then ran when other deputies tried to take him into custody.

 

Court records show that six criminal felony cases and one misdemeanor case were filed against Harris in Tulsa County District Court over a 10-year span. His convictions include making threatening telephone calls and escaping from a penal institution in 1990, as well as robbery with a dangerous weapon in 1999. He also was found guilty of forging a document and two counts of larceny, records show.

 

Bates, according to the release, saw Harris reach near his waistband as he fled from pursuing deputies and responded by pulling out what he thought was a Taser. After Harris became involved in a struggle with another deputy, Bates, thinking he was using a Taser, fired one shot, striking Harris.

 

“During the rapidly evolving altercation, the reserve deputy had what he believed was his Taser ... when he inadvertently discharged his service weapon, firing one round which struck Harris,” according to the media release issued by the Sheriff’s Office.

 

Harris was treated at the scene by EMSA and died less than an hour later at a Tulsa hospital, according to Clark.

 

Clark said “preliminary information” has led investigators to believe Harris was under the influence of PCP at the time of the shooting.

 

Tulsa Police Department homicide Sgt. Dave Walker said Friday that although the homicide took place in the city limits, TPD would not investigate the death unless the Sheriff’s Office asked them to.

 

“And they have not asked us to,” Walker said.

Bates was named Reserve Deputy of the Year in 2011, according to the Sheriff’s Office website.

Clark said Thursday that it’s not unusual for a reserve deputy to be on an assignment such as the Violent Crimes Task Force.

 

“What I will say is that the deputy had the specialty training to be assigned to this task force, similar to what a full-time deputy would have had,” Clark said Thursday.

Clark said the Sheriff’s Office has more than 100 reserve deputies, all of whom go through the same training components as a normal deputy but with an abbreviated curriculum.

 

Reserve deputies “have full powers and authority” of a deputy while on duty, he said.

 

At 10:30 a.m. Thursday, attorneys for Bates were in Tulsa County District Court for a hearing in a civil lawsuit in which he is the defendant, records show. The pre-trial hearing was held in District Judge Jefferson Sellers’ courtroom, with attorney Clark Brewster and two other attorneys representing Bates, records show.

Bates is being sued by his former insurance agency, Robert C. Bates LLC, in Tulsa County District Court.

 

He formed Robert C. Bates Inc. in 1977 and sold the agency in 1999. Bates remained as head of the new company, Robert C. Bates LLC, until resigning in 2012, records show.

He now operates Commercial Insurance Brokers LLC, at 4200 E. Skelly Drive, records show.

 

Finally, I make this posting not to hype the incident but simply because it would likely be posted anyway. It is better to have the sources cited.

 

pubby

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The "victim" was a POS anyway. Run from the police and you might get shot. Easy fix - follow the law and don't run from the police.

 

I believe the officer was retired from a department with years of experience. Old people get confused sometimes.

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The "victim" was a POS anyway. Run from the police and you might get shot. Easy fix - follow the law and don't run from the police.

 

I believe the officer was retired from a department with years of experience. Old people get confused sometimes.

 

He owned an insurance company, his only experience was he was a big contributor to the sheriff's reelection campaign.

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The 73-year-old volunteer reserve deputy in Oklahoma who fatally shot a suspect in an incident that the Tulsa County Sheriff's Office called "inadvertent" has now been charged with second-degree manslaughter, the Tulsa County District Attorney's Office said today.

 

http://abcnews.go.com/US/oklahoma-reserve-deputy-73-charged-degree-manslaughter-stun/story?id=30277587

Edited by CitizenCain
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