Police Incompetence-Tell Em What YOU Think!!

by . Friday, Jan. 10, 2003 at 9:03 AM

Police pullover family, arrest them, shoot their dog, and laugh about it. One problem, NO CRIME WAS COMMITTED!

There are many harrowing experiences in this world, and one of them definitely is getting

shoved around by a cop and arrested for no apparent reason, and then watching the cop shoot

your dog in front of your kid, and laugh about it!

This type police abuse of power and unproffesionalism is an outrage. I urge everyone who

reads this to email, write, fax,or call the contacts at the end of the transmission and let

them know exactly how utterly unacceptable this is. Use the most outraged voice and/or tone

you can muster to let them know exactly what you think.





http://www.herald-citizen.com/NF/omf/herald/news_story.html?[rkey=0024251+[cr=gdn

'Felony stop' leaves family traumatized
Mary Jo Denton
Herald-Citizen Staff

It was the most traumatic experience the Smoak family of North Carolina has ever had, and it

happened yesterday afternoon as they traveled through Cookeville on their way home from a

vacation in Nashville.

Before their ordeal was over, three members of the family had been yanked out of their car

and handcuffed on the side of Interstate 40 in downtown Cookeville, and their beloved dog,

Patton, had been shot to death by a police officer as they watched.

What was their crime?

There was no crime.

But a passerby with a cell phone apparently assumed a crime had occurred when a wallet flew

from a car on Interstate 40 near Nashville.

That citizen called police and inadvertently set in motion what would make it the most

horrible vacation the James Smoak family of Saluda, North Carolina, has ever had.

Today, the Smoak children and their parents were still weeping over what happened to them in

Cookeville.

By today, they had also filed complaints with two police agencies, prompting internal

investigations, they had met with Tennessee Highway Patrol Capt. Randy Hoover, and they were

on their way to talk to Cookeville Mayor Charles Womack.

Because official internal investigations are underway at the Tennessee Highway Patrol and at

the Cookeville Police Dept., the Herald-Citizen was unable to get details of those two

agencies' accounts of the incident.

But the Smoak family willingly told their story to anyone who would listen; they hope by

doing so that something might be done to prevent it from happening to another family.

James Smoak, 38, who was traveling in the family station wagon with his wife, Pamela, their

17-year-old son, Brandon, and the family's two pet bulldogs, Patton and Cassie, had lost his

wallet after stopping for gas as they left Davidson County on Wednesday afternoon.

But he didn't know he lost it. Apparently, he had placed it on top of the car while pumping

gas, and it flew off somewhere on the highway a short time later.

Not knowing his wallet was lost, he and his family traveled on, heading east on their way

home to North Carolina.

A few cars behind James and Pamela's station wagon, his parents and the two younger Smoak

children were traveling in the elder Smoak's car.

Just a few miles east of Cookeville, James Smoak began to notice that a THP squad car was

following him, though the officer was not pulling him over, just staying behind him,

changing lanes any time Smoak did, moving in and out of traffic each time Smoak did.

"It was obvious he was looking at me, not at other vehicles, and I'm thinking I must have

done something (in my driving), but I don't know what," Smoak said today.

When Smoak reached the 287 exit area in Cookeville, three other police cars suddenly

appeared, and the trooper then turned on blue lights and pulled the Smoak car over.

"I immediately pulled to the side, and expecting him to come to the window, I started

reaching for my wallet to get my license and it was not there," Smoak said.

About that time, he heard the officer broadcast orders over a bullhorn, telling him to toss

the keys out the car window and get out with his hands up and walk backwards to the rear of

the car.

Still not knowing what he was being stopped for, Smoak obeyed, and when he reached the back

of the car, with a gun pointed at Smoak, the trooper ordered him to get on his knees, face

the back of the car and put his head down.

When he did that, the officer handcuffed him and placed him in the patrol car. Then the same

orders were blared over the bullhorn to "passenger" and Pamela Smoak got out with her hands

up, was ordered to the ground, held at gunpoint, and handcuffed. Next, Brandon was ordered

out and handcuffed in the same way.

Terrified at what was happening to them for no reason they knew, the family was also

immediately concerned about their two pet dogs being left in the car there on the highway

with the car doors open.

"We kept asking the officers -- there were several officers by now -- to close the car doors

because of our dogs, but they didn't do it," said Pamela Smoak.

And as the officers worked in the late evening darkness, their weapons drawn as the Smoaks

were being handcuffed, the dog Patton came out of the car and headed toward one of the

Cookeville Police officers who was assisting the THP.

"That officer had a flashlight on his shotgun, and the dog was going toward that light and

the officer shot him, just blew his head off," said Pamela Smoak.

"We had begged them to shut the car doors so our dogs wouldn't get out, and they didn't do

that."

As the dog was heading out of the car toward the officer, "we had yelled, begging them to

let us get him, but the officer shot him," she said.

Grieving for their dog and in shock over their apparent arrest for some unknown crime, the

family could only wait. At one point, one state trooper did tell them they "matched the

description" in a robbery that had occurred in Davidson County, Pamela Smoak said.

The ordeal went on for a time after that, the family terrified and in grief over the dog.

Finally, after a time, someone in authority figured out that the officers here had stopped

and were holding the very family that someone in Davidson County had assumed had been

robbed, though how that assumption grew to the authorization for a felony stop, James Smoak

cannot understand, he said today.

"Finally, they asked me my name and I told them my name, date of birth, and other

information, and they talked by radio to someone in Davidson County and finally realized

that a mistake had been made," he said.

"A lady in Davidson County had seen that wallet fly off our car and had seen money coming

out of it and going all over the road, and somehow that became a felony and they made a

felony stop, but no robbery or felony had happened," Pamela Smoak said.

"Apparently, they had listened to some citizen with a cell phone and let her play detective

down there," said James Smoak.

"Here we are just a family on vacation, and we had to suffer this."

When the officers did discover the mistake, "they said, 'Okay, we're releasing you and we're

sorry,'" Smoak said.

As soon as Brandon was released from the handcuffs, he rushed over to the dead dog and began

to cry, Smoak said.

And that's when one of the most infuriating parts of the ordeal happened, according to James

Smoak.

"I saw one of the THP officers walk over to the city officer who had shot the dog and grin,"

he said.

He reported that to the supervising officer, THP Lt. Jerry Andrews, and Andrews "was very

nice, very professional," Smoak said.

"He told me the officer was not laughing, but I know he was," said Smoak.

Smoak's parents had come along behind the other car and had seen all the commotion and

stopped too, and now all three children were crying over their pet dog, as they were still

doing today.

The Smoaks gathered the body of their pet and went to a motel here to spend the night. But

they didn't get much rest, and at one point, James Smoak became so upset he had to go to the

hospital for medical treatment.

They also worked throughout last night to contact all the authorities they could in order to

lodge their complaints about what had happened.

Today, Beth Womack, a THP spokesperson in Nashville, told the H-C that an Internal Affairs

investigation is underway and that every effort will be made to "find out exactly what

happened and why."

"As I understand it, a report was made in Davidson County to our officers that this car had

been seen leaving at a high rate of speed and that a significant amount of money had come

out of the car and someone became suspicious," she said.

An internal investigation is also underway at the Cookeville Police Dept., Capt. Nathan

Honeycutt told the H-C today.

James Smoak wonders about the logic of "a robber who would be tossing the money out of the

car."

He also wonders about police procedure that would "take this insinuation from a citizen" and

"turn it into what happened to us."

"Out there after they handcuffed us at gunpoint and put us in the police cars, they did not

ask for ID, and later on, they actually released us just on my word about my identity, with

only the confirmation by radio from an officer in Davidson County who was looking at my lost

wallet and the ID in it down there," he said. "What if I actually had been a robber and not

just a family man on vacation?"

His children hope they never come to Tennessee for another vacation.

"Poor Patton," said 13-year-old Jeb Smoak. "When he was killed out there, it was the first

time I ever saw my brother, Brandon, cry. Brandon is the toughest person I've ever met, and

he cried."

The other dog, a puppy named Cassie, was "trembling all over" after the ordeal, Jeb Smoak

said.

"She's being real quiet today. She knows we're all grieving."

James Smoak, though still deeply upset today, said he understands that "the officer will say

the dog was coming after him."

But it could all have been prevented, didn't have to happen, he is convinced.

In addition to telling his family's story to Capt. Randy Hoover, who "was very nice and very

professional," and to a Cookeville Police official last night and to Mayor Womack today,

Smoak also plans to tell his lawyer, he said.

"And I also want to tell it to the Tennessee Department of Tourism," he said.

Published January 02, 2003 11:54 AM CST





















THP District Six Headquarters
P.O. Box 826
1291 Bunker Hill Rd
Cookeville, Tenn. 38501
Office: (931) 528-8496

safety@mail.state.tn.us

Captain: Randy Hoover

Administrative Lieutenant: Marvin Ricketts






Governor Don Sundquist
State Capitol
Nashville, TN 37243

e-mail: dsundquist@mail.state.tn.us

Telephone: (615) 741 - 2001

Fax: (615) 532 - 1353



Mayor of Cookeville

Telephone: (931) 520-5241, (931) 526-9591

mayor@cookeville-tn.org