Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Deputy back on job after fatal shooting

Rose Bud gunfire justified, letter says

- DEBRA HALE-SHELTON

A White County sheriff’s deputy has returned to work after a prosecutor tentativel­y cleared him of wrongdoing in a fatal shooting in Rose Bud, pending an investigat­ive report from the Arkansas State Police.

Sgt. Scott Seiders is back on duty, Chief Sheriff’s Deputy Phillip Miller said Thursday.

Prosecutin­g Attorney Rebecca Reed McCoy said the sheriff’s office wanted to get Seiders back to work. She said she agreed to write a letter saying that her investigat­ion, which included a review of two officers’ body cameras, found that the deputy had used reasonable and justified deadly force.

McCoy said her finding is pending a report from the Arkansas State Police but that she doesn’t expect anything to change.

Seiders went on routine administra­tive leave after the Dec. 9 shooting death of James Newman, 69, in Rose Bud. Newman lived in that area.

Miller has said previously that a second county officer was at the scene but was not involved in the shooting. Newman had some previous run-ins with the law, but nothing as serious as this en-

encounter, Miller said.

Arkansas Annotated Code 5-2-610 details when an officer is justified in using deadly physical force.

Justificat­ion exists if the officer “reasonably believes” that such force is necessary to make an arrest or “to prevent the escape from custody of an arrested person whom the law enforcemen­t officer reasonably believes has committed or attempted to commit a felony and is presently armed or dangerous.”

Such force also is justified, the statute says, when an officer reasonably believes that deadly force is necessary to “defend himself or herself or a third person from what the law enforcemen­t officer reasonably believes to be the use or imminent use of deadly

physical force.”

Deputies were called to the scene over what someone thought were shots fired at two homes.

Once there, White County authoritie­s have said, Newman was repeatedly told to put down his rifle but refused to do so. Instead, authoritie­s said, he began approachin­g the deputy and pointed his rifle at the deputy, who then shot him.

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