English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

STATESBORO, GEORGIA - A father was seriously injured and his son was killed Tuesday when a rental trailer they were towing was rear-ended on Interstate 16 by a police officer who specializes in nabbing aggressive drivers and who was en route to Chatham County to take part in a safe-driving campaign, officials said.

Cpl. Robert Balkcom, an assistant commander of the Georgia State Patrol post in Statesboro, said no charges have been filed yet, but they are likely, against Dougherty County Police Officer Jeremiah Fenn, 25, of Albany.

Officer Fenn was headed to Chatham County to take part in Operation Rolling Thunder, a 90-day effort to curb Savannah’s rising traffic fatality rate with the help of scores of officers from around the state.

Officer Fenn was driving eastbound near Metter when he took his eyes off the road for a second to look at the computer mounted in his car and struck a trailer being towed by an SUV traveling in the same direction and in the same lane, Cpl. Balkcom said.

The video camera in Officer Fenn’s car, which could have recorded the accident, was turned off, Cpl. Balkcom said.

The SUV overturned several times, ejecting Milton Wilcox, 33, of Savannah, a passenger who was not wearing a seat belt, police said.

Mr. Wilcox was pronounced dead at the scene. His father, William Wilcox, 57, of Savannah, the driver, was airlifted to Savannah’s Memorial Health University Medical Center with serious injuries, Cpl. Balkcom said.

A two-mile eastbound stretch of the interstate was closed for about six hours while members of the Georgia State Patrol’s Specialized Collision Reconstruction Team investigated the accident, Cpl. Balkcom said.

Witnesses told authorities that Officer Fenn’s police car was “traveling at a high rate of speed,” an issue that will be addressed by the investigation, Cpl. Balkcom said.

“There will more than likely be charges,” he said.

Officer Fenn is a participant in a statewide program known as Highway Enforcement of Aggressive Traffic (H.E.A.T.), a collaborative effort of the Governor’s Office of Highway Safety and eight local law enforcement agencies to nab aggressive drivers.

2007-06-05 14:34:28 · 5 answers · asked by Snoop Dog Loves Paris Hilton 1 in Politics & Government Law Enforcement & Police

5 answers

and yet again I state you REALLY have some serious issues with the police don't you dear.

You always seem to be able to hunt out the negative but NEVER the good that they do day in and day out just to keep the streets as safe as they can, you also seem to fail to recognise that in EVERY profession there is good and bad.

This policeman will more than likely be charged and rightly so ONCE the whole story is out in the open, but I fail to see why you feel it is your god given right to "unmask" all the negatives you can possibly troll about the police force.

2007-06-05 15:07:50 · answer #1 · answered by candy g 7 · 3 1

What you say makes sense, of course. But in the service industry, like other professions, there are idiots and thugs,too. In most cases these officers never work in the same capacity again. The best they can hope for is to hang around some school and make certain the kids get on the bus safely at the end of the day. And they shouldn't even be allowed there.

2016-04-01 04:37:28 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

No, I didn't see it.

2007-06-07 16:16:07 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Nope.

2007-06-05 15:36:52 · answer #4 · answered by scruffycat 7 · 1 0

keep up the good work snoop expose these crimnals for the scum they are

2007-06-05 15:18:30 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 5

fedest.com, questions and answers