Scott's Random Thought for the Day (Tiki Torches from Castle Rock)
Here's a news story that ran yesterday in the
St. Petersburg
Times.
Shooting
of three ends in
surrender
A
former USF campus police sergeant barricades himself inside his home for several
hours.
By
JACOB H. FRIES and SHANNON
TAN
Published
November 19,
2005
CLEARWATER
- Jeffrey Devries had long complained the neighbors were out to get
him.
He
told police he had been the victim of various crimes, from battery to burglary.
Officers had gone to his Beverly Circle home eight times this year. So when he
saw four people on his porch carrying tiki torches about 2 a.m. Friday, he
feared they were trying to break in, Pinellas sheriff's detectives
said.
Tiki torches? Am I the only
one that finds this detail a little disturbing? Why are people carrying around
tiki torches in the middle of the night? As we'll see later Mr. Devries appears
to have some, how shall we say this... reality management issues, but apparently
these people really were carrying around tiki
torches.
He
fired six shots through the front door of his home at 1818 Beverly Circle,
wounding three of the people, said sheriff's spokeswoman Marianne Pasha. As
squad cars and ambulances raced to the scene, Devries, a retired University of
South Florida campus police sergeant, barricaded himself inside, triggering a
standoff with authorities that would last more than seven
hours.
Those
wounded - Samantha Frances Sipka, 16; Jason Thomas Biaso, 19; and Mark Eric
Hoover, 46 - sustained injuries that weren't considered life-threatening. Sipka
was in stable condition and Hoover in fair condition at Bayfront Medical Center
in St. Petersburg, authorities said. Biaso, who was shot in the shoulder, was
treated and released.
That's
quite a spread of ages, especially if these people aren't related. If this were
a question of youthful hijinks you wouldn't expect a 46-year-old, or a
23-year-old we'll hear about a bit later, to be
involved.
The
three of them initially told investigators they had been walking in the street,
carrying the torches, when all of a sudden, shots rang out and they were hit,
Pasha
said.
Physical
evidence uncovered at the scene, however, indicated they had been on Devries'
doorstep - not the street - when Devries fired, Pasha said. Detectives also
learned there had been a fourth person present, Miles Bailey Jr., 23, further
supporting Devries' account of the
shooting.
Confronted
with the discrepancies, one of the four admitted they had been at the door at
the time of the shooting, reading signs Devries had posted on the door, said
Pasha. She declined to identify the
person.
Sipka
and Hoover declined to comment through a hospital spokesman. Biaso also declined
to answer questions. Efforts to reach Bailey were
unsuccessful.
No
charges had been filed late
Friday.
"There
are various levels of conflicts in their statements," Pasha said, "so there's
still more work for the investigators to
do."
* *
*
The
first 911 call came at 1:51
a.m.
"I
heard the gunshots - boom, boom, boom!" said neighbor Ken List, 50. "Then
screaming, like the people were trying to
run."
Jennifer
Lechner, 46, another neighbor, went outside and ducked behind a bush to take a
look. She heard screams from Sipka, who was shot in the jaw and
thigh.
She
saw Hoover, who was shot in the arm, yelling from the street at responding
officers, "We're here. We're here. The gunman's next door." Both Clearwater
police and Pinellas County sheriff's deputies responded because the street lies
on the city-county line. The sheriff's SWAT team eventually replaced
Clearwater's team and resumed attempts to communicate with Devries, Bordner
said.
List,
through his window, saw camouflaged deputies approach Devries' house, then
retreat, again and again for hours in the darkness. "They were very methodical,"
he said. "For a while, I thought they were going to storm the back of the
house."
Finally,
after hours talking with negotiators over the phone, Devries surrendered at 9:30
a.m. As he walked out his door, he ignored some of the deputies' commands. He
was struck with a Taser and shot with a rubber bullet, Bordner
said.
Devries,
who wore blue sweat pants and a T-shirt, was then handcuffed and taken to a
hospital for
evaluation.
"He
looked very docile," List recalled. "He just looked worn
down."
In
recent weeks, Devries had called 911 and e-mailed police with increasing
frequency, claiming that he had been the victim of various crimes, Clearwater
police spokesman Wayne Shelor said. Officers responded to his house, but found
nothing to substantiate his
claims.
In
April, he told police someone was using "transponders" to harass him at home,
police reports show. Last month, he said neighbors had developed a way to send
voices through his electrical wiring. Among the voices he heard inside his
house, he told officers, was that of fiction writer Stephen
King.
Stephen King? Stephen King
sounds like someone who used to be in the AV Club in high school. That's just
about the last voice anyone would use to harass someone else. If you're going to
use King you might as well use Bill Gates and Wallace Shawn
too.
Jeffrey
Devries worked as a police officer at USF's St. Petersburg campus from 1988 to
1998 when he retired as a sergeant, a university spokeswoman said. His father
said his son left the job when he developed thyroid
cancer.
"That
really devastated him," said Stanley Devries,
73.
The
elder Devries, who visited his son after he was taken into custody, said his son
had felt the need to defend himself Friday morning. The neighbors had been
banging on the door and windows and Devries thought they were trying to get
inside, his father
said.
"They
were obviously making a lot of noise and were very threatening," he
said.
Sadly, there was no update
in today's paper.
Posted: Sun - November 20, 2005 at