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King Determined to See
Justice Prevail
Stacey
King has always been the determined type.
That quality is a big reason why the 55-year-old Missouri pro has qualified
for 10 appearances in the CITGO Bassmaster Classic and won two BASS
tournaments during his career. But the latest object of his determination
has nothing to do with catching bass.
King is after justice and seeking to make a statement that is heard
throughout the fishing and non-fishing worlds – that you can’t shoot at a
fisherman because he or she is fishing near your property.
In June, King was competing in the Bassmaster Elite 50 tournament on the
Alabama River when, he reported, a waterfront resident fired multiple shots
in the direction of his boat (which also contained an observer), as well as
a nearby boat carrying longtime BASS photographer Gerald Crawford. He later
found that his boat had been hit by one of the shots.
Law enforcement soon arrested Paul Gray, whom King had never met or spoken
to before the incident. And now the wheels of the Alabama legal system have
begun to move.
King recently traveled to Lowndes County, Ala., for the first hearing, only
to find that the judge had to excused herself after learning that Gray had
hired her father as his legal counsel for the case. It proved to be a long,
wasted trip for King.
“I just received a letter (stating) that they had appointed a new judge from
a different county to hear the case,” he said. “They’re supposed to let me
know when the next hearing is.
“We were expecting that. I presume that we’re going to have to go down there
at least a couple more times to get this resolved. I’m going to go down
there as many times as I have to do it to get this thing resolved.
“It is a lot of trouble, but my resolve is set to see this thing through and
see that hopefully this man is convicted of these charges because this has
happened before (in Louisiana) and there was never really anything done
about it. And I’m hoping that the media will pick up on this if he is
convicted and show people across the country that you can’t just go out and
start shooting at a man in his fishing boat for no reason.
“You shouldn’t be out there shooting towards the water anyway. Hopefully, we
can educate the public that something like that shouldn’t ever happen. The
next time it happens, somebody could get hurt. It could have happened in our
situation. Somebody could have been hurt and I don’t want to see it happen
to somebody else — or me again for that matter.”
Gray is charged with three charges of reckless endangerment and one charge
of criminal mischief. According to the Lowndes County Clerk of Court’s
office, each carries a potential penalty of a year imprisonment or a fine up
to $2,000, or both.
“We don’t expect him to get that,” King said. “He’ll probably get a fine and
a suspended sentence, more than likely. At least it could be a setback for
him and maybe the press will spread the story if we can get a conviction.
And maybe people will come to the notion that they can’t do that sort of
thing.”
From BASS
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