Outrage or outcome?

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David Sturdivant has lost his liberty, a kidney, his home, his business and all his belongings.

He has nothing left other than the $21 a friend put on his account at the Fulton County Jail, where he has been since April 8.

The 64-year-old Marine Purple Heart recipient could have left jail two weeks ago, but he refused to plead guilty to a misdemeanor, a deal that included 12 months probation with credit for the seven months served.

The deal would have let Sturdivant keep his guns – four rifles and a pistol -- as well as his military disability benefits, according to the prosecutor.

Fulton County Judge Kelly Lee told Sturdivant it was a good offer because he was looking at as much as 105 years in prison if a jury convicted him of all six felony charges he faces.

“He was under the mistaken belief it would be OK to shoot at an intruder,” senior assistant district attorney Jason Park said in court.

Sturdivant is charged with shooting at a man in his yard -- not in his house -- that he thought was there to steal from him.

Yet as far as Sturdivant is concerned, he did nothing wrong.

“We’ll go to trial,” public defender Wes Bryant told the judge on Oct. 27.

It has been quite an odyssey for Sturdivant since he woke from a nap just after 1 p.m. April 8 to go to the bathroom.

A police officer shot him in the stomach, which cost him a kidney.

His house and business burned almost two months later while he was in jail.

The tools and lawnmowers Sturdivant had in his shop for repair have been stolen.

His antique Thunderbird and white Ford 150 pickup, electronics and HAM radio equipment that belonged to his father, the surveillance cameras positioned around the property, his clothes, important papers and even the door knobs and the key to his mailbox, all gone.

He has no family and his only friend is already caring for an elderly mother and can't take him in.

The Veterans Administration, alerted to Sturdivant's plight, said it has programs that help homeless vets and someone would go to the jail to talk with Sturdivant about services available in the next few days.

According to police reports, Sturdivant awoke on that Friday afternoon to see Dennis Alexander in his yard.

Alexander’s pickup was parked beside the engine repair shop attached to Sturdivant's house and one of the riding lawnmowers in for repair was positioned near the open tailgate to the bed of the Dodge Ram.

Alexander, jailed several times for property crimes but not charged in this case, told police he was there to buy parts.

“Get off my property and stop stealing my stuff,” Sturdivant shouted at Alexander from the second-floor balcony.

The neighbors said Alexander, who was not charged in this encounter, mocked Sturdivant.

Sturdivant, a frequent target of thieves, answered with a single shot from his commercial-grade M14.

Police officers nearby with a crew filming the truTV reality television program Bait Car heard the shot -- the only one Sturdivant fired -- and responded to the corner of Bolton Road and Collier Drive to find a naked and armed Sturdivant.

A truTV camera captured it all – the confusion, tension, the fast breathing and the adrenaline of the officers who swarmed to the corner lot shrouded by trees, bushes and underbrush.

Two of the officers, including the one who fired the shot that hit Sturdivant, were still wearing microphones from the Bait Car taping when they responded to the shot.

“Where he at? Where he at?” an officer can be heard shouting.

Another says, “You got a shot, take it.”

“Drop the gun,” one officer shouts.

A second later one rifle shot is fired.

“I think he’s down. He went down. He went down. He went down. I don’t see him any more,” said one of the first officers wearing the mic from the taping.

A minute and 45 seconds later, Sturdivant peeked over a four-foot-tall piece of plywood that was the railing for his balcony and three police officers responded with gun fire.

According to court records three officers fired a total of 14 times.

“Did he pop up?” asks a second officer, still wearing a microphone from the television taping.

“Did you guys see a gun? Did he see a gun? I hope it was a gun.”

Inside his house, Sturdivant called 911 for an ambulance.

He told the operator the police had shot him.

According to court records, the bullet that hit Sturdivant first passed through the strap of his rifle and then a wooden piece on the barrel before going into the left side of his abdomen.

His lawyer says the route of the bullet suggests that Sturdivant never pointed the rifle at the officers.

APD's internal investigation into the shooting is pending.

Sturdivant was at Grady Memorial Hospital for about a week and he has been housed in the medical unit at the jail since.

On May 30, there was afire on his property that the fire department called "suspicious."

His house and everything inside burned. Vandals have left his late-father’s house a few yards away uninhabitable.

All Sturdivant’s tools for his business have been stolen from his repair shop.

At the same time, it looks as if the property where he lived all his life except for his four tours in Vietnam is now being treated as a garbage dump.


http://www.ajc.com/news/man-facing-105-years-1221252.html
 
and you just cower on your knees, ready to blow their badges, copsucker.


I don't spam the board with compulsive anti-law enforcement drivel, do I? That would be you.

How many cops have you confronted in person, jaw-jacker?
 
http://www.upi.com/Top_News/US/2011...p-charges-against-veteran/UPI-16131321329379/

Prosecutors dropped felony charges against an Atlanta veteran who fired four shots into the ground outside his home to scare off a man he suspected was a thief.

But while he gained his freedom Friday after seven months in the Fulton County Jail, former Marine David Sturdivant, who served four tours of duty in Vietnam and received a Purple Heart, has lost a kidney after being shot by a police officer, his home, his business and all his possessions, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported.

Sturdivant, 64, could have been freed about two weeks ago if he had pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor, for which he would have received probation.

But he refused, saying he did nothing wrong when he fired into the dirt last April with a commercial-grade M14 to scare off the alleged intruder. He could have received up to 105 years in prison if convicted on the felony charges.

Read more: http://www.upi.com/Top_News/US/2011...nst-veteran/UPI-16131321329379/#ixzz1dzPr90IC

I would say he should sue the cop who shot him for his home, life savings, career income, wife and firstborn if necessary, but we already know that most of you bootlickers would decide in favor of the cop who recklessly fired a potentially lethal shot before he actually knew what was going on.
 
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