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A not-so-funny contact in Midland, 2005

Posted: Mon Jul 16, 2007 1:59 pm
by KBCraig
I just stumbled onto this report, linked from another forum. It took place in March, 2005.

The newspaper report is very one-sided. Based on what's presented there, I (like most here) would have assumed the CHL was guilty and should go to prison.

But the trial report from a blogger who was there (he was struck from the jury pool, and wanted to see how it turned out) tells a much different picture. It seems to me that if Harris wasn't a constable, he would have been the one on trial.

First, the article:
http://www.mywesttexas.com/site/news.cf ... 5626&rfi=6

Man goes on trial for allegedly threatening to kill constable
Bob Campbell
Midland Reporter Telegram
05/10/2005

From Staff Reports

Jury selection began Monday afternoon in the 238th District Court trial of a man who allegedly threatened his neighbor, a Midland County constable, with a pistol March 18.

Facing a possible sentence of five to 99 years or life in prison for aggravated assault on a peace officer, Theodore L. Jurgensen, 67, has been incarcerated in Midland County Jail in lieu of a $250,000 bond.

Precinct 2 Constable Charles "Choc" Harris told sheriff's officers Jurgensen sprayed his dogs with pepper spray, then pulled a pistol and threatened to kill him when Harris went two doors down to Jurgensen's residence to inquire about the incident in the 1300 block of South County Road 1130.

Sgts. Ray Meek and Mike Reed took Jurgensen into custody.

"We were just enjoying the day and charcoaling some hot dogs in the backyard," Harris said. "I went over there and tried to talk to him to ask what happened. He became very belligerent, and the next thing I know he kicks at me and pulls a gun on me."

Harris said he negotiated with Jurgensen to avoid being shot and then returned home to call officers.
(...)


Note how the bold section differs from the trial testimony below (also in bold).

http://sleepless.blogs.com/george/2005/ ... exas_.html

State of Texas vs. Theodore L. Jurgensen

[The most recent update is at the end of this post.]

They say that good fences make good neighbors. If only Theodore L. Jurgensen had a good fence on March 19, 2005, he wouldn't be in the trouble he's in.

He's on trial today in the 238th Judicial District Court in Midland, Texas, for aggravated assault against a peace officer, and this case has a very intriguing fact situation.

Yesterday, in the posted titled Jury Duty, I described the jury selection process for State v. Jurgensen in which I was a member of the original jury panel but was struck by one side or the other. The trial started yesterday afternoon, and as soon as I got free today I scurried to the 238th court room to see what was going on in the Jurgensen trial. Unfortunately, the complaining witness, Constable Charles "Choc" Harris, along with his mother and fiance had already testified. But, I was able to see Mr. Jurgensen's testimony.

According to Mr. Jurgensen, Constable "Choc" Harris moved onto the rural property next door with two unruly dogs; a large grey one and a pit bull. The large grey dog bit Mr. Jurgensen, and both dogs growled and barked at him when he got near the fence. On the day in question he was disposing of some tumble weeds, and he had to get down on the ground to place a cement block against a gate to prop it open. And the dogs barked, snarled and snapped at him, and even though they were on the other side of the chain link fence, he was afraid that they might climb over the fence as he had seen them do before. So he applied some pepper spray to their yapping faces.

Not long after that, Mr. Harris came forward and said, "did you spray my dog?" Mr. Jurgensen replied, "I sprayed TWO of your dogs." Mr. Harris responded by jumping over the fence and grabbing Mr. Jurgensen with both hands by the shirt near the neck and said, "YOU'RE UNDER ARREST!"

Jurgensen is a thin, wiry guy of 67 years of age. He looked to be around 5' 10'' in height, and he testified that he weighs 147 pounds. I'm guessing that Mr. Harris' weight exceeds 250 pounds, so there was a definite weight class mismatch.

Mr. Jurgensen testified that as Mr. Harris was holding onto his shirt Mr. Jurgensen did a quick flip of his arms that broke Mr. Harris' hold. Then Mr. Jurgensen performed what he described as a "left front snap kick" to Mr. Harris' crotch. Mr. Jurgensen pulled his handgun, a Smith & Wesson .357 semi-automatic, and ordered Mr. Harris to his knees. Mr. Harris pleaded with him to take his finger off of the trigger, and Mr. Jurgensen elevated the muzzle so that it didn't point directly at Mr. Harris.


Mr. Harris wanted to use Mr. Jurgensen's cell phone, and Mr. Jurgensen declined but said "who would you like me to call." Then he told Mr. Harris "you're disgusting. Go home." And that ended the confrontation, at least for the moment.

Enter law enforcement. Constable Harris called the sheriff's office who sent a deputy out to interview both parties. The deputy talked to both of them then filed his report. Back at the office, a decision was made to arrest Mr. Jurgensen. (There doesn't appear to have been any discussion of charging Mr. Harris for trespassing.) And on the following Monday, two sheriff's deputies and a five member swat team located Mr. Jurgensen in town, and they arrested him, swat style.

They found the handgun and a knife in the car. By the way, Mr. Jurgensen has a concealed handgun license.

The handgun was chambered with Speer hollow point bullets, and the prosecutor spent several minutes questioning one of the arresting officers as well as Mr. Jurgensen on that subject. A hollow point bullet expands when it strikes an object, and the result is a larger wound if it hits flesh plus a reduced likelihood that it would go completely through anything it hit, a wall, for example. There wasn't any testimony of what kind of bullets were in the gun on the date of the incident at the fence.

After the Judge read the jury instructions, the closing summations by the prosecution, Steve Stallings, and the defense, David Rogers, were brief retellings of the facts of the case, so for me it was a good chance to get some of the blanks filled in.

But there was one thing that struck me, and that was the way the prosecutor, Steve Stallings, handled one of the prosecution exhibits, Mr. Jurgensen's Smith & Wesson .357 semi-automatic handgun. The handgun had a cable lock on it, and it was probably inoperable. But, one of the rules of handgun safety is to treat every gun as if it were loaded. Call me a gun safety nut, but to see Mr. Stallings waving it around with abandon, inadvertently pointing it at the jury and just about everyone else, including me, I couldn't help but think that was awfully curious behavior. I couldn't take my eyes off it, and it was terribly distracting -- I didn't even hear what he was saying. If he wanted the jury to regard the handgun as the thing, the one thing, that turned this neighbors' squabble into a serious felony then I would think he would want to treat that gun as he would a live rattlesnake instead of waving it around as a harmless object. But, that's just me, and I was kicked off the jury in the first place, so it doesn't matter.

Judge John Hyde kept the case moving at a pretty good pace, and while there were some delays, the jury was sent to deliberation in slightly over 24 hours after the trial began. So as of the time of this writing the jury is either still deliberating or has retired for the day. I hope to receive a phone call from the court when the jury returns with the verdict, so watch for an update.

UPDATE, Today, 6:30 pm CDT: The jury had been given a choice of four charges, if they found him guilty. The most severe, aggravated assault on a peace officer, carried a penalty of probation to 99 years in prison. The weakest of the four charges was "deadly conduct." The jury came back around 5:00 pm with a verdict of GUILTY of "deadly conduct." The penalty phase of the trial will begin at 9:00 am tomorrow.

UPDATE, 5/11/05, 1:15 pm CDT: The punishment phase of the trial took place this morning, and the jury came back a little before noon with a verdict for a punishment for the class A misdemeanor of confinement in jail for one year with a fine of $4,000 but with the jail time suspended in favor of two years of community supervision (probation). Judge Hyde accepted the jury's verdict and added 30 days jail time without credit for time already served. The formal sentencing will take place Friday.

UPDATE, 5/13/05, 5:30 pm CDT: Today around noon Judge Hyde conducted the formal sentencing hearing. The sentence of one year of confinement was suspended, and Mr. Jurgensen was sentenced to two years of community supervision (probation) pursuant to Article 42.12 of the Code of Criminal Procedure plus 30 days in jail which began on May 11, 2005. During the two year probationary period he may not possess or maintain firearms, he must attend anger management classes, and he cannot have alcohol or controlled substances. He was ordered to perform the maximum number of hours of community service provided by the said Article 42.12. And he can have no contact with Charles Harris or Mr. Harris' mother or fiance. Finally, he was instructed that as a further condition he must obey the family court in which he and his wife are getting a divorce.

Posted: Mon Jul 16, 2007 5:24 pm
by pbandjelly
Holy Cluster-Bomb, Batman!

I have to say, that the whole situation is bad.

here's my armchair QB'ing:
shouldn't have sprayed the dogs, as they were no "imminent threat," as we say, and perhaps could have asked ol' Choc to restrain the dogs whilst he worked in his yard. Should he have to do that? NO. but it is an alternative to what happened.
When ol' Choc leapt the fence, I feel that Mr Jurgenson was in the right to display his HandGun. (On a side note, I've not seen a SemiAuto .357, maybe .357Sig?)
perhaps a better way of defending himself would have been a second dose of PeppaSpray, if any was still available.
Still think Harris was wrong the whole way through.

just goes to show, it's who you know.

Posted: Mon Jul 16, 2007 5:36 pm
by seamusTX
pbandjelly wrote:(On a side note, I've not seen a SemiAuto .357, maybe .357Sig?)
Yep. S&W M&P.

- Jim

Posted: Mon Jul 16, 2007 6:47 pm
by gregthehand
I think the whole thing is a travesty. This "cop" acted on shear emotion when he jumped that fence. These are the cases that make people on a large scale distrust their judicial, and law enforcement officials. :cry:

Posted: Mon Jul 16, 2007 10:25 pm
by phddan
I believe they put the wrong neighbor in jail. :evil:

Dan

Posted: Tue Jul 17, 2007 1:39 am
by KBCraig
This is yet another reminder of the importance of being the first to call 911.

Posted: Tue Jul 17, 2007 2:21 pm
by pbandjelly
seamusTX wrote:
pbandjelly wrote:(On a side note, I've not seen a SemiAuto .357, maybe .357Sig?)
Yep. S&W M&P.

- Jim
well, they didn't specify Sig, Mag or nuthin, so I figgered.
although a .357 Mag SemiAuto would be boss!

Posted: Wed Jul 18, 2007 7:56 pm
by Xander
pbandjelly wrote: although a .357 Mag SemiAuto would be boss!
Well S&W might not have one, but you *can* get a Desert Eagle in .357 Magnum. :grin:

Posted: Thu Jul 19, 2007 11:37 am
by pbandjelly
yeah, smooth forgot about that one.
and yes, it IS boss.

Posted: Mon Aug 06, 2007 12:37 pm
by HankB
If the guy had already been bitten by one of Harris' dogs, why wasn't the dog deemed "dangerous" and put down?

Why did Jorgensen spray the dogs when they were still on the other side of the fence?

Why didn't he spray Harris?

Were there any other witnesses who actually saw what happened?

If the 147 lb senior citizen had actually shot the 250 lb man who jumped the fence and assaulted him in his own yard . . . considering the disparity of force . . . and a record of previously having been bitten by one of fatso's dogs . . . would there have been a court case at all?

Too many unanswered questions . . . it looks like there were mistakes on the part of both parties. I'm glad I don't have to render a judgement based on the posting.

Posted: Mon Aug 06, 2007 1:51 pm
by KBCraig
It turns out that Choc Harris is a CHL instructor.