MORON A Florida Cop Gets Into a Shootout With an Acorn, Emptying His Gun Into His Own Patrol Car (with suspect cuffed inside)

Krayola

Veteran Member

A Florida Cop Gets Into a Shootout With an Acorn, Emptying His Gun Into His Own Patrol Car​

Deputy Jesse Hernandez, whose bullets miraculously missed the handcuffed suspect in the car, resigned during an investigation that found he "violated policy."​

JACOB SULLUM | 2.14.2024 1:25 PM

A falling acorn prompted a Florida sheriff's deputy to empty his pistol into his own patrol car, where a handcuffed suspect was sitting at the time. Another deputy also fired at the car. Amazingly, neither the suspect nor anyone else was injured. The bizarre incident, which happened on November 12 in Fort Walton Beach, led to the resignation of Deputy Jesse Hernandez three weeks later, the Okaloosa County Sheriff's Office revealed on Friday.

Hernandez, who had been a deputy since January 2022, and his partner, Sgt. Beth Roberts, were responding to two service calls. The first, received at 8:42 a.m., involved "a vehicle driving around honking its horn and disrupting the peace since 3 a.m.," the sheriff's office said. The second call was from a woman who said her 22-year-old boyfriend, Marquis Jackson, had stolen her car and "had been calling and texting her threats." She "provided text messages she said had been taken from inside her vehicle showing what appeared to be a firearm suppressor pointing at the dash of the victim's vehicle."

Jackson, who showed up at the scene on McLaren Circle around 9:09 a.m., "was detained, searched, handcuffed, and placed in the rear of Deputy Hernandez's patrol vehicle while the investigation continued" and "the victim completed the affidavit for the stolen vehicle." She "told deputies Jackson had a silencer" but "she was not sure where it was" and added that he "had more than one weapon." Meanwhile, "other deputies found the victim's vehicle at 1656 Hunt Club Street."

Body camera video shows what happened next. Hernandez is walking back toward his patrol car when he exclaims, "Shots fired! Shots fired! Shots fired!" He rolls, runs away from his car, turns, and fires 17 rounds into the vehicle, emptying his magazine. While he is firing the last few rounds, he shouts, "I'm hit! I'm hit!" Later he says, "I'm good, but I feel weird." Then he speculates that "it might have hit my vest" and asks another officer, "Dude, am I hit?"

Hernandez was not hit, because no shots were fired until he began shooting at the patrol car where Jackson was sitting. After "witnessing Deputy Hernandez's response and reaction and fearing for his life," the sheriff's office says, Roberts "responded with gunshots towards the car as well in response to the perceived threat."

That's a lot of responding. To what, exactly? The sheriff's office says Hernandez "heard a pop sound which he perceived to be a gunshot." It adds that "the audible sound Deputy Hernandez reported can be heard on body cam video" (not by me!) and that "witnesses also attested they heard the sound they thought could have been a muffled gunshot." During the ensuing investigation, Vice News reports, Hernandez was shown "frame-by-frame footage" in which an acorn can be seen hitting the patrol car, which was parked near an oak tree. "Acorn?" Hernandez asked. "Acorn," an investigator replied.

"Immediately we began working diligently to determine the complete sequence of events and facts surrounding what transpired," Sheriff Eric Aden said. "Deputy Hernandez resigned during the course of our investigation but was ultimately found to have violated policy" because his use of deadly force was not "objectively reasonable."

The internal investigation "also led to the determination" that Roberts' "use of deadly force was objectively reasonable," and "she was exonerated." A review by the 1st Judicial Circuit State Attorney's Office found "no probable cause for criminal charges" against either deputy.
Aden said he is "limited in further response due to pending litigation." But he added: "We understand this situation was traumatic for Mr. Jackson and all involved and have incorporated this officer involved shooting…into our training to try to ensure nothing similar happens again. We are very thankful Mr. Jackson wasn't injured and we have no reason to think former Deputy Hernandez acted with any malice. Though his actions were ultimately not warranted, we do believe he felt his life was in immediate peril and his response was based off the totality of circumstances surrounding this fear. Just as we have an obligation to protect our officers so they can go home safely to their families, law enforcement has the same obligation to any citizen being investigated for a crime."
If Hernandez's actions "were ultimately not warranted," of course, he cannot take refuge in "the totality of circumstances." Those circumstances included a suspect who had already been repeatedly searched and taken into custody. Yet the pop of a falling acorn was all it took to convince Hernandez that Jackson had somehow managed to conceal a handgun equipped with a silencer, then retrieve and fire it, all while handcuffed and restrained by a seat belt in the back of a police car.

In a Facebook post, Jackson claims he "had not done anything wrong" when he was approached by the deputies. "They never told me anything," he writes. "I decided to cooperate and just follow demands….I was searched multiple times, then unlawfully handcuffed and placed into the backseat of the cop car while being strapped down by the seatbelts."

When the shooting started, Jackson says, "All I could do was lean over and play dead to prevent getting shot in the head. I was scared to death and I knew all I could depend on was God! I ignored everything and prayed! Windows were shattering on me the whole time as bullets continued flying across me. I was blessed not to get hit by any bullets or get hurt physically but mentally, I'm not ok. I haven't been the same since and I don't think this feeling I have will ever change. I truly believe I'm damaged for life!"


********************************************************************************

I suppose this is what happens when Florida Man joins the police academy.
 

Luddite

Veteran Member
The feds always warned us those silencers were lethal.

I propose our nation prints enough money to put a portable xray machine in every cop car in America.

Because you know, the perp could have suitcased that silenced weapon up his poop chute. He could have deployed it while cuffed&stuffed.

Reasonable objectivity obviously prevents any criminal charges. Officers Rocky and Bowinkle can just go get another job with another department.

(All sarcasm FTR)

Wonder if original complainant went back to the boyfriend now that he's probably gonna be rich? You heard him describing the "damages".
 

West

Senior
My grandmother on mom's side was going senile. Her last trip out, my uncle took her to a cabin in the woods for a weekend.

Walking from the car to the cabin a small pinecone fell and hit my grandma. She asked who's throwing things at me. Uncle said it must of been a snow monkey, just kidding around.

She stayed in the cabin the rest of the weekend, from fear of the snow monkeys. It really was sad and she showed real fear.

If she had a gun, she would of shot blindly into the trees.

Her excuse was old age and going senile.

These jerks need to find a assembly line job, or alike.
 
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Deena in GA

Administrator
_______________
We recently had a similar thing happen locally. Police had someone stopped and his car backfired. They shot at him at least 15 times from what I’ve heard, wounding him. Here’s one of the articles about it.


The GBI has released new information regarding an officer involved shooting that occurred Wednesday on Manchester Expressway in Columbus.

A news release from the GBI identified the person injured in the shooting as Jermaine Hernandez, 26, of Phenix City, Ala.

The GBI said that preliminary information indicates that Columbus Police Department officers conducted a traffic stop on Manchester Expressway on a vehicle traveling 100 mph in a construction zone.

Hernandez was identified as the driver of the car, according to the GBI.

The release said the car reportedly backfired during the traffic stop causing a loud noise that sounded like gunfire.

The officers then shot at Hernandez multiple times, striking him once, according to the GBI.
The GBI said officers and EMS provided first aid at the scene before taking Hernandez to a local hospital for treatment.

The investigation is active and ongoing, according to the GBI. Both officers are on administrative leave with pay pending the conclusion of the investigation, according to police.

Anyone with information can contact the GBI Regional Investigative Field Office in Columbus at 706-565-7888. Anonymous tips can also be submitted by calling 1-800-597-TIPS (8477) or online at Submit Tips Online.

An account from someone near the shooting
Cindy Conner, Director of Accounting and Human Resources at Safeguard Forms & Systems Inc., was inside a building nearby when she heard shots being fired.

"I didn't see the shooting, we just heard it. You know that sound, you knew immediately what it was," Conner said.

She automatically went outside to check after hearing approximately between 10 or 12 gun shots.

She looked across the street to Manchester Expressway and saw two police officers cautiously approaching a vehicle. Later on, she saw police pull a person out of a vehicle, while more police cars and an ambulance arrived on the scene.

"The guy, he's in the car, two policemen are behind him, they have their guns drawn.," Conner related. "About the time they pull him out you just see the cop cars lining up."
This story was originally published February 8, 2024, 10:44 AM.
(c)2024 the Columbus Ledger-Enquirer (Columbus, Ga.) Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
 
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Doc1

Has No Life - Lives on TB
The most disgusting aspect of this story is the two-tiered "just us" system US citizens endure daily. If anyone on this board (or anyone else) had irresponsibly emptied their magazines at another human being, based on the scant evidence described in this story, they would be buried under the jail by the weight of the multiple charges they'd doubtless be clobbered with. Attempted murder, aggravated assault, reckless endangerment, terrorism and firing a weapon inside the city limits are just a few of the charges I can think of off the top of my head.

A kindly prosecutor would confer with your attorney and offer to drop one or two of the charges in return for a guilty plea for the rest. You would be bankrupted by the legal fees, almost certainly become a convicted felon and probably do at least some prison time.

But...but...but, because the two yahoos in the story were members of a protected class - police officers - every excuse in the book was used to avoid charging them with anything. The lady sergeant who is still employed by the department will probably be offered grief and trauma counseling and be given some paid leave. The other yahoo - who started the entire incident - suffered nothing more than having to resign his commission. Oh, the humanity!

Sadly, incidents similar to this are repeated across the country on a fairly regular basis and - almost always - the cops walk.

A lot of cops still wonder why there is an ever-widening trust chasm between themselves and the public they (supposedly) serve.

Best
Doc
 

Blacknarwhal

Let's Go Brandon!
The most disgusting aspect of this story is the two-tiered "just us" system US citizens endure daily. If anyone on this board (or anyone else) had irresponsibly emptied their magazines at another human being, based on the scant evidence described in this story, they would be buried under the jail by the weight of the multiple charges they'd doubtless be clobbered with. Attempted murder, aggravated assault, reckless endangerment, terrorism and firing a weapon inside the city limits are just a few of the charges I can think of off the top of my head.

A kindly prosecutor would confer with your attorney and offer to drop one or two of the charges in return for a guilty plea for the rest. You would be bankrupted by the legal fees, almost certainly become a convicted felon and probably do at least some prison time.

But...but...but, because the two yahoos in the story were members of a protected class - police officers - every excuse in the book was used to avoid charging them with anything. The lady sergeant who is still employed by the department will probably be offered grief and trauma counseling and be given some paid leave. The other yahoo - who started the entire incident - suffered nothing more than having to resign his commission. Oh, the humanity!

Sadly, incidents similar to this are repeated across the country on a fairly regular basis and - almost always - the cops walk.

A lot of cops still wonder why there is an ever-widening trust chasm between themselves and the public they (supposedly) serve.

Best
Doc

And somehow, Jesse Hernandez will have a new job one or two counties over in about a month or two.
 

Blacknarwhal

Let's Go Brandon!
Leo's are strung tight. Here they made a traffic stop on the highway and the car backfired as two Leos approached. It's a miracle no one is dead only non-life-threaten injuries.

See, that sounds less like an "us" problem and more like a "them" problem. The thing is, it BECOMES an "us" problem when they hear a noise in our direction, get spooked, and open fire in our direction and suffer no more than a temporary job loss for it.
 

zeker

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Barney Fife comes to mind
who is gonna pay for the damages to the vehicle.

that many rounds landing on ?? the cruiser,

it must be toast?

or mebbe NONE hit the cruiser?

it musta been at least 20 ft away

easy miss when you are wounded (sarc)
 

Rabbit

Has No Life - Lives on TB
See, that sounds less like an "us" problem and more like a "them" problem. The thing is, it BECOMES an "us" problem when they hear a noise in our direction, get spooked, and o pen fire in our direction and suffer no more than a temporary job loss for it.
Sorry, but if I were a cop in that situation I'd probably fire too. The driver could have held both empty hands out of the window.
I don't know enough about cars and I'm asking can you make a car backfire on purpose?
 
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