Times Colonist

Missouri sheriff, deputy charged with assault, robbery, child endangerme­nt

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KANSAS CITY, Missouri — A southern Missouri sheriff and a subordinat­e with whom he was having a romantic relationsh­ip have been indicted on multiple felonies following a year in which more than 40 sheriff’s office employees were fired or quit.

The indictment charges Texas County Sheriff James Sigman and Lt. Deputy Jennifer Tomaszewsk­i with assault, robbery, child endangerme­nt, unlawful use of a weapon, harassment and two misdemeano­urs. No attorneys are listed for them in online court records.

Sigman was elected in 2012 and remains in office, although the coroner is leading the department while Sigman is jailed in Greene County. His bond is set at $500,000 US. Special prosecutor Don Trotter said Tomaszewsk­i has been released on bond.

A Missouri State Highway Patrol trooper wrote that Tomaszewsk­i hit a man with the mental capacity of a nine-year-old in the face with her elbows after he was rendered unconsciou­s, possibly by a “choke hold.”

A correction­s officer told investigat­ors that Tomaszewsk­i said she was “trying to bust his eardrum out.” And a deputy told investigat­ors, “If we hadn’t been there, they would have killed that boy. He was unconsciou­s and his lips were turning blue,” according to the probable cause statement. The statement said Sigman was present during the incident and that reports about what happened were removed from the mentally disabled inmate’s file.

The trooper wrote that Tomaszewsk­i also threatened to put a bullet in the head of another inmate but that the grievance the inmate filed was missing when a search warrant was served this spring at the sheriff’s office.

The patrol’s investigat­ion focused on the period after Tomaszewsk­i was hired as a jailer in December 2016 and before she completed her peace officer certificat­ion in May. She was promoted during that time to jail administra­tor without “prior experience” and is currently Sigman’s chief deputy, the probable cause statement said.

The statement said she went on ride-alongs, acted as an undercover officer during stings and served search warrants during which she would detain suspects, search residences and perform other duties reserved for commission­ed officers. Sometimes she was armed with an AR-15 rifle normally used by Sigman and wore a uniform that was indistingu­ishable from what deputies wore, the trooper wrote.

While serving one search warrant, she pointed a firearm at several people, including a one-yearold, who lived across the street from the home being searched, placing all of them in “immediate danger,” the trooper wrote. Tomaszewsk­i confronted them because she thought they were video recording the officers and taking pictures and mistakenly believed that wasn’t allowed.

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