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Store guards kill another worker in Detroit
By Larry Roberts
24 February 2001
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For the second time in less than a year, security guards at
a retail store in the Detroit metropolitan area have killed a
shoplifting suspect following a confrontation. This time two security
guards beat a shoplifter to death at a supermarket over two packages
of meat.
Last June 22, Fredrick Finley, 32, was killed by a plainclothes
security guard working for the Lord & Taylor department store
in Dearborn when he attempted to stop the men from grabbing his
11-year-old stepdaughter. The guards had suspected the girl of
stealing a $4.00 bracelet.
Sometime between 7:30 and 8:00 p.m. on February 8, Travis Shelton,
38, went shopping at the Kroger food market in Royal Oak Township,
a small community just north of Detroit which is policed by the
Oakland County Sheriff's Department. At the store Shelton was
reported to have placed two packets of tenderloin beef under his
coat, paid for a box of crackers and headed for the door.
What followed afterward has become an issue of contention between
Oakland County Sheriff Michael Bouchard, who has defended the
guards and placed the responsibility for Shelton's death on his
poor state of health, and witnesses who have stated the guards
were the aggressors and literally beat Shelton to death.
At a press conference the day after the confrontation, Bouchard
told the media that Shelton aggressively tackled one of the security
guards when he was asked to stop, and began to wrestle him in
an attempt to make his way out of the store. According to Bouchard's
account, a second guard jumped in to stop Shelton, but both guards
had little success against a man who weighed 260 pounds. A stock
manager then joined in to help the security guards hold Shelton
down.
Bouchard said that by the time the police arrived the guards
had finally subdued Shelton without punching or hitting the shoplifting
suspect, as required by the law and guidelines established by
Kroger. The sheriff said when his two officers arrived they saw
the guard sitting on Shelton's back. They placed handcuffs on
the suspect while he was lying face down. When they turned Shelton
over they noticed his eyes were open but he did not respond to
their inquiries. Bouchard said at that point the officers removed
the handcuffs and began to administer CPR to revive his breathing.
An ambulance was called, Shelton was rushed to the nearest hospital
and pronounced dead at 8:27 p.m.
Bouchard praised the guards for following proper procedures
and said Shelton had a litany of health problems that contributed
to his sudden death. The factors he listed were asthma, high blood
pressure and obesity. Shelton was five-foot six and weighed 260
pounds.
In support of the sheriff, Oakland County Medical Examiner
Dr. L.J. Dragovic added that in addition to his health problems
the victim also had cocaine and opiates in his systema likely
indication of heroin useand an enlarged heart, more than
double the normal size. The examiner said there was no sign Shelton
had been hit, commenting, There was a little scratch on
the left knee. That is all.
Witnesses debunk sheriff's report
Within the last week two witnesses have come forward to contradict
the sheriff. Both witnesses' statements contradict the reports
by Sheriff Bouchard, as well as the initial remarks of Dr. Dragovica
man notorious for his role on behalf of the police in the Malice
Green police beating and the Nathaniel Abraham cases. They suggest
a cover-up for a vicious beating that resulted in Shelton's death.
The account given by one witness, Joanette Quinn, who lives
near the store and is a frequent patron, makes it clear that the
two security guards on duty, Jason Clover, 21, and Lewis Wartley,
42, had it in for Shelton and waited for him to exit the store
before they began their attack.
Quinn said before the attack took place she heard the guards
talking about getting someone. He said it so much I thought
he was talking to one of the customers behind me, said Quinn.
Quinn said that when Shelton attempted to exit the store the
taller guard, Wartley, placed his arm across the door to block
Shelton from leaving the store. She said at that point Shelton
ran to the area where the shopping carts are lined up and grabbed
onto a steel bar that protects the wall while the guards tried
to pry his arms off the rail.
He was crying, said Quinn. They pulled him
off the railing, wrestled him down, stood him back up next to
the telephone where the taller guard choked Shelton while the
other guard put his elbow into Shelton's neck.
At that point I saw Mr. Shelton's eyes go up into his
head, continued Quinn. After that the larger security
guard grabbed him by his pants leg and literally pulled him up
by his feet. His head hit the back of the pavement, then they
rolled him over, placed his hand behind his back and then they
sat on him.
Clover, the guard who sat on Shelton's back, reportedly weighs
377 pounds, more than 100 pounds more than Shelton. According
to Quinn, Clover sat on Shelton for as long as 10 minutes before
the police arrived.
Quinn gave her account at a press conference called by attorney
Geoffrey Fieger, who has been hired by the Shelton family. At
the conference Fieger announced he was filing a $750 million civil
suit against Kroger and the William Davis Security firm, the guards'
employer.
Fieger added that the force of Shelton hitting the ground when
the guard pulled up his legs was so great that the windows of
the store shook from the impact. Fieger called the attack by the
guards murder and questioned why the Oakland County Prosecutor's
Office has not arrested anyone or charged either of the guards
in Shelton's death. I can bet you, stated Fieger,
if that had been a guard treated like Shelton was treated,
he would be in jail right now and facing murder charges.
Fieger said he has requested a second autopsy from Dr. Werner
Spitz, the medical examiner in neighboring Macomb County.
The second witness to oppose the sheriff's version is a Royal
Oak Township firefighter who assisted the guards in subduing Shelton.
Sylvester Foote, 29, told the media that he reported to the sheriff
it was the guards, not Shelton, who were the aggressors. Foote
said the guards jerked Shelton by the coat and within minutes
they had him down on the floor. Foote said he and another store
employee held Shelton's arm while he was on the ground, but he
became concerned when the heavy guard sat on Shelton's back. Foote
said Shelton was face down on the floor gasping, I can't
breathe, I can't breathe. Foote said he motioned to the
guard to move off Shelton's back, but the guard refused. According
to Foote, Shelton was resistant but never tried to hit or punch
either one of the guards.
I can't help but feel responsible, said Foote.
If I hadn't helped the guards Shelton would have had an
arm free and still be alive. He might have run a block and died
there, but it wouldn't have been at my expense.
On February 14, one day after the published report of Foote's
account, Dr. Dragovic ruled that Travis Shelton died of asphyxiation
and classified his death as a homicide. The guy sitting
on top of him deprived him of oxygen, Dragovic told the
Oakland Press. However, Oakland County Prosecutor David
Gorcyca has said he still has not decided whether he will file
charges in the case. The prosecutor said he is waiting for full
reports from both the sheriff's department and the medical examiner
before deciding if any charges should be brought.
Geoffrey Fieger and Travis Shelton's relatives acknowledge
that Shelton had a history of drug use and shoplifting convictions,
an issue that has been continually raised by the media and repeated
by the sheriff. They attribute his stealing of petty items to
an untreated and undiagnosed case of kleptomania, a psychiatric
condition that causes a person to steal compulsively. Fieger also
noted that the media has not commented on the fact that Shelton
held a full-time job, that he had not missed a day of work in
over a year, and had three children and a wife that he cared for.
Violence on the part of store security guards has continued
in the wake of Travis Shelton's death. On the evening of February
21, Gail Hardy, 42, was waiting for a prescription at a Rite Aid
drug store when a security guard repeatedly struck her over the
head with a police stick because she used a nail clipper to trim
her nails and then returned the clipper to the store shelf. The
guard, a 32-year-old woman, hit Hardy three to five times in the
head, knocking her to the ground and causing a gash that required
eight staples to close. Hardy had been waiting for a prescription
for a spinal injury.
See Also:
The killing of Frederick
Finley: sudden death in an American city
[19 July 2000]
Thousands protest
killing of Detroit man by mall security guards
[8 July 2000]
An American tragedy
born of poverty: the death of an unemployed mother in Detroit
[14 June 2000]
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