CRIME A Teen Was Having Car Trouble. A Sheriff’s Deputy Shot and Killed Him.

danielboon

TB Fanatic
A Teen Was Having Car Trouble. A Sheriff’s Deputy Shot and Killed Him.
The 17-year-old was putting a jug of antifreeze behind the back tire so
his vehicle wouldn't roll into the officer's car, according to his family.
EO
By Emma Ockerman
June 28, 2021, 2:56pm
1624915499746.png
A PHOTO OF 17-YEAR-OLD HUNTER BRITTAIN. (IMAGE COURTESY OF FAMILY)
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During a traffic stop last week, an Arkansas sheriff’s deputy shot and killed a teenage boy who was only armed with a neon-blue jug of antifreeze, family members told VICE News.

Lonoke County Sheriff’s Office Sgt. Michael Davis stopped 17-year-old Hunter Brittain near Cabot, Arkansas, at about 3 a.m. last Wednesday, and it’s still unclear why. Hunter had been having trouble with his truck when Davis pulled in behind him outside of a local auto repair shop and flashed his emergency lights, according to the account of a 16-year-old riding with Hunter at the time. When Hunter went to put the antifreeze behind his back tire so his vehicle wouldn’t roll into the officer’s, Davis allegedly fired at him.

“Before he could get there, he was shot in the neck,” Hunter’s uncle, Jesse Brittain, told VICE News. “We can’t begin to understand why he would take a shot at that boy.”

“We’re not going to stop until we have some answers, some justice,” he added.

The boy’s death has since sparked protests outside the sheriff’s office located near Little Rock. A Twitter post briefly detailing the shooting also went hugely viral over the weekend.

Early on June 23, before Davis stopped Hunter, an aspiring NASCAR driver from McRae, Arkansas, the teen had been fixing up his truck so he could make it to work on time, Jesse Brittain said.

Hunter had just fixed his transmission and taken the truck out for a test drive when Davis pulled him over, according to the teen riding with Hunter and his uncle’s knowledge of the incident.

“The shifting linkage in the truck was messed up, so when they pulled up, the truck was rolling back,” Jesse Brittain told VICE News.

That’s why Hunter went to get the antifreeze.

After Davis fired, Hunter “sustained a gunshot wound and was transported to a North Little Rock hospital, where he later died,” the Arkansas State Police said in a short statement last week.

Jordan King, the teen with Hunter the night of the incident, told local ABC affiliate KATV that Davis didn’t say anything to Hunter before shooting him. Another deputy showed up and handcuffed King for hours, though Jesse Brittain said the teen, who’s also a family member, was never charged with any crime.

“All they were doing was working on the truck,” Jesse Brittain said.

Rebecca Payne, Hunter’s grandmother and his guardian at the time, told VICE News that authorities have told her little about what happened to her grandson. It wasn’t even the sheriff’s office that told her Hunter had been shot, but other people who were at the property where he was killed, she said.

“I guess I don’t trust any police right now,” Payne said. “Won’t nobody tell us anything. The body hasn’t been released. None of the information has been released to us. We’ve been told a lot of different things.”

Lonoke County Sheriff John Staley said in a video statement posted to his office’s Facebook page last week that “like everyone, I want to know exactly what happened.” He added that Arkansas State Police will investigate and that his office has provided the agency with body-cam footage, though it’s unclear how much of the incident was captured. The family has not seen any body-cam video.
“In potentially dangerous situations, deputies are often forced to make split-second decisions,” Staley said. “Second-guessing those decisions, especially when the facts are still unclear, is dangerous and unfair.”

But Staley also pledged to hold any deputy who broke the law or his office’s policies accountable. Davis is currently on administrative leave.

“We all want the truth. We all want justice. But I humbly ask everyone to avoid rushing to judgment until the investigation is over,” Staley said. “Sadly, on social media, some people are demanding I take action without waiting for evidence. That’s irresponsible, and I won’t do it.”

The Lonoke County Sheriff’s Office did not immediately respond to a request for additional comment.

A spokesperson for the state police said in a statement to VICE News Monday that the agency would not send out further statements “until the prosecuting attorney receives the completed investigative file and determines whether the use of deadly force by a law enforcement officer was or was not consistent with Arkansas laws.”
 

mistaken1

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Training.
TRAINING!

Oh my. So sad. Prayers for his family.

I thought I had read some time in the past they did away with the targets. But like so many other things did they just go low profile rather than go away? I am pretty sure I have some original images if I can remember which computer they are on I will post them.
Or perhaps they have newer targets that have anti-freeze and wallets and cellphones in the target's hands.


LEO Training Tool of the Day: “No More Hesitation” Targets

By
Dan Zimmerman
-
February 20, 2013
122



When it’s your job to protect and serve, you have to be prepared for just about anything. So when faced with a threat, the last thing you want as a police officer is to dither when looking down the barrel of a gun. Even when the person pointing that gun is a child. Or other “non-traditional” target as Law Enforcement Targets (“Targeting for a Safe America”) likes to call them. LET’s producing a series of photographic targets (click here for their customer service response) they call the “No More Hesitation” series, depicting subjects like pregnant women, old men and kids holding guns. Because if there’s one thing we need, it’s LEOs desensitized to shooting women and children. But wait, it gets better! As reason.com reports, our friends at the DoD and DHS are big clients of LET. I wonder how many No More Hesitation targets are included in that $5.4M “training aids” purchase?

NMH-6.JPGNMH-4.JPG
 
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Red Baron

Paleo-Conservative
_______________
Like any suspect or suspects involved in an alleged homicide, the police/sheriffs involved should be separated, detained and questioned by a non-related police agency. Evidence should be removed from the suspect police agency's possession.

The victim's legal representative needs to have full access to all phases of the investigation.

Things have to change in order to preserve any sort of remaining law enforcement credibility.
 
Last edited:

medic38572

TB Fanatic
I guess I don’t trust any police right now,” Payne said. “Won’t nobody tell us anything. The body hasn’t been released. None of the information has been released to us. We’ve been told a lot of different things.”

It is best for everyone alive right now.
 

Doc1

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Well now, before you all go off half cocked, you should understand that the kid was holding an evil, semi-automatic, WMD, high-powered jug of assault antifreeze... You know, instead of the regular kind. Also, this happened in Arkansas, where it never gets cold and no policemen have ever seen a jug of antifreeze.

Best
Doc
 

Hfcomms

EN66iq
Training.
TRAINING!

Oh my. So sad. Prayers for his family.


And Parents educate your children what to do and not to do during a traffic stop and most of these incidents can be avoided. I am not defending the cop's action in this. It is what it is. In the current environment if they are in doubt many are going to pull the trigger. So teach your kids even before they get the license. If at night in your in the vehicle turn on the dome lights, keep your hands on the wheel, turn off the engine and don't make any moves. If your outside the vehicle keep your hands in sight and don't reach for anything and follow instructions.

I won't fault the innocent kid for this but 17 year olds and pull knives and guns in an instant. If you are old enough to drive you are old enough to be considered a threat. I've done some of the shoot/don't shoot drills during training and I'd be lying if I said that I didn't make a mistake. The cops are supposed to be better trained than this but you never know when you run across a dud.

Have that talk with the kids, drill it into their heads and practice it yourself and stay alive during a traffic stop.
 

Doc1

Has No Life - Lives on TB
If I were writing a novel and if the protagonist was the kid's dad, I think I'd have him send a completely sterile letter to the cop stating, "Commit suicide, before your family sees your bloodied body on the evening news. You'll never know when it's coming; weeks, months or years."

Then, over time, the protagonist would send a round into his car, house or near his head. A moderately skilled marksman can easily do this from 500 yards away or more.

Year after year after year...

Read up on Civil War sniper Jack Hinson.

Best
Doc
 
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Southside

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Good shoot ... right fellas?

Someone earlier said sumpin ' bout pickin sides?



In reality. I wouldn't say one f**kin word ....

O.W.
In reality. I wouldn't say one f**kin word ....
^^^THIS^^^

Other than, as soon as I saw the brain matter escape, "There, that's done"
 

Oscar Wilde

Membership Revoked
Jug of anti-freeze to stop car from rolling ! ! ! ! LOLOLOLOLOL

It's good that someone is able to find humor in this ....

What are the odds that deputy douchebag knew this kid on a personal level eh.

Almost sounds like a hit, instead of an accident.

Didn't see your post Rob ... yeah, my thinkin as a point of curiosity.

And lets see some body cam footage!

O.W.
 
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danielboon

TB Fanatic
If I were writing a novel and if the protagonist was the kid's dad, I think I'd have him send a completely sterile letter to the cop stating, "Commit suicide, before your family sees your bloodied body on the evening news. You'll never know when it's coming; weeks, months or years."

Then, over time, the protagonist would send a round into his car, house or near his head. A moderately skilled marksman can easily do this from 500 yards away or more.

Year after year after year...

Read up on Civil War sniper Jack Hinton.

Best
Doc
View: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=APWhx97QvxE
8:29
 

Groucho

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Read up on Civil War sniper Jack Hinson.

Best
Doc


Here's a short version:

John W. “Jack” Hinson, better known as “Old Jack” to his family, was a prosperous farmer in Stewart County, Tennessee. A non-political man, he opposed secession from the Union even though he owned slaves. Friends and neighbors described him as a peaceable man, yet despite all this, he would end up going on a one-man killing spree.

Jack’s plantation was called Bubbling Springs, where he lived with his wife and ten children. When the Civil War broke out in 1861, he was fiercely determined to remain neutral.

When Union Brigadier General Ulysses S. Grant arrived in the area in February 1862, the Hinsons hosted the man at their home. The general was so pleased with the plantation that he even turned it into his temporary headquarters.

Even when one of their sons joined the Confederate Army, while another joined a militia group, Jack remained strictly neutral. They were content to manage their plantation despite the ongoing conflict.

Grant had stayed at the Hinson estate after capturing Fort Henry and Fort Donelson. In taking the last, he secured a vital gateway to the rest of the Confederacy. The Union’s victory at the Battle of Fort Donelson was also its first major one since the start of the Civil War.

His victory also meant that Union troops became a permanent fixture in the Kentucky-Tennessee border where the Hinsons lived. While the family had no problem with that, others did – and the Hinsons would pay dearly for it. In the end, so would many Union soldiers.

Since many in the region were sympathetic to the Confederacy, some turned to guerrilla tactics to deal with the better armed and trained Union soldiers. These were called bushwhackers, because they hid in the woods where they could attack Union troops before fading back into the wild.

It wasn’t just soldiers they went after, however. There were many cases where they’d target Unionist farmers and sympathizers, as well. Still others were not so politically motivated. Some bushwhackers were bandits who took advantage of the deteriorating law-and-order situation to prey on isolated homesteads. In some cases, they even attacked entire communities.

After the fall of Fort Donelson to Union troops, guerrilla attacks on Union soldiers and their supporters increased. As a result, it became policy to torture and execute any suspected bushwhackers without a trial.

In the fall of 1862, Jack’s 22-year-old son George Hinson, and his 17-year-old brother, Jack, went deer hunting about a mile from their home as they always did. Unfortunately, they came across a Union patrol who suspected them of being bushwhackers.

The boys were tied to a tree then shot, after which their bodies were dragged back to town. There the corpses were paraded around the Dover courthouse square as an example of the Union’s zero-tolerance policy toward resistance. The remains were then decapitated and left there, while the heads were brought to the Hinson plantation.
Ulysses Grant went on to become the 18th president. This picture of him taken between 1870 to 1880 is his official presidential portrait
Ulysses Grant went on to become the 18th president. This picture of him taken between 1870 to 1880 is his official presidential portrait

Before the entire family, the heads were stuck on two gate posts as an example of Union justice. The lieutenant in charge wanted to arrest the Hinsons for their relationship to the two alleged bushwhackers but was informed about Grant’s stay on the property. He was also told that the major general would not take kindly to any mistreatment of the surviving Hinsons, so they were left alone.

That was the lieutenant’s second mistake of the day.

Of Scottish-Irish descent, Jack could not let the murders of his sons go unpunished. He buried his children’s remains, then sent the rest of his family and slaves to West Tennessee to stay with relatives.

He then commissioned a special 0.50 caliber rifle with a percussion-cap muzzle-loader. Besides its lack of decorative brass ornamentation, this rifle was also unique because it had a 41” long octagonal barrel that weighed 17 pounds. The length of the barrel ensured that he could accurately hit targets from half a mile away.

As to the octagonal shape, it was based on the Whitworth Rifle. With its hexagonal barrel, it could shoot farther (2,000 yards) and more accurately than the Pattern 1853 Enfield (1,400 yards) with its traditional round rifled barrel.

Moving into a cave above the Tennessee River, Jack became a bushwhacker at the age of 57.

His first target was the lieutenant who ordered his sons shot and beheaded. The man was killed as he rode in front of his column. The second target was the soldier who placed the heads on the gateposts. It didn’t take the Union long to connect the dots, so they burned down the abandoned Hinson plantation.

The Tennessee and Cumberland rivers were major transport hubs, so he frequented both. From his higher vantage points, he targeted Union boats, picking off captains and officers, as well as disrupting the flow of river traffic.

The most spectacular story of his sniping career was when an entire boat of Union soldiers surrendered to him. After Jack fired on the boat, the captain thought he was being attacked by Confederate soldiers. To avoid further bloodshed, the captain beached his boat, raised a white tablecloth, and waited to be captured. But Jack couldn’t possibly handle them all, so he retreated and let them wait.

Though he remained apolitical, he began helping the Confederate Army. In November 1864, for example, he guided Lieutenant General Nathan Bedford Forrest to Johnsonville to attack its Union supply center.

Jack died on 28 April 1874 and lies buried in the family plot in Cane Creek Cemetery.

With help from the locals and by constantly staying on the move, he avoided capture despite the massive manhunt for him. His family was not so lucky, however. Two of his younger children had died of disease, while the son who joined the army also died, as did another during a guerrilla raid.

Jack survived the war and cut 36 circles in the barrel of his rifle to mark the number of Union officers he killed. Union records, however, blame him for over 130 kills – though it’s believed that he may have killed “only” a little more than 100.
 

vector7

Dot Collector
LEO Training Tool of the Day: “No More Hesitation” Targets

No more hesitation!

If she ain’t brown, take her down!

View attachment 274281

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