Pubdate: Thu, 31 Dec 2009 Source: Toccoa Record, The (GA) Copyright: 2009 The Toccoa Record Contact: https://secure.townnews.com/thetoccoarecord.com/forms/letters.php Website: http://www.thetoccoarecord.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/5073 Author: Tim Hendricks SHOOTING IS AN EXMPLE OF SHODDY POLICE WORK Like many others in Toccoa, I waited for the outcome of the Jonathan Ayers case. After hearing nothing for so long and willing to give benefit of the doubt, the recent thorough write-up of the Grand Jury results certainly shed light on events. Jonathan Ayers certainly exercised risky and poor judgment associating himself with Kayla Barrett. It is also very understandable that the way the circumstances played out, Jonathan put himself in a position to appear involved. However, shooting to kill a man that never produced a weapon in a crowded gas station at an intersection was, no doubt, very poor police work. This is even more apparent in that the Toccoa Police station is a block and a half away, and even shooting the tires out would have been risky at a gas station. The officer that he thought was hit by Jonathan's car had to tell his partner to stop shooting after he himself was hit by shrapnel. Also, apparently, the Grand Jury was "coached" prior to hearing the case that essentially, due to a law that could be made to apply in this case, would mean that basically, it would go nowhere. Even if Jonathan's family pursued a civil case and paid expensive legal fees, what could they hope to gain by this letter of the law? Jonathan could have been any of us, our children, our friends, or anyone that just needed to learn from their mistakes and get another chance in this life. Instead, he is dead, and the officer doing the shooting is apparently still in police work, free and clear. It is appalling that something of this magnitude could be so flippantly swept under the rug. I'm sure I speak for several others, that at the very least, as long as a hair-trigger public employee such as Billy Shane Harrison is allowed to carry a gun and work on any police force except behind a desk, I am worried. Why should people be content to have a society in which public officials paid to protect the citizens' safety are allowed to be judge and jury and not held responsible for their actions in such a small time case as this? Tim Hendricks Toccoa - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake