Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

LR CELEBRATES MLK through prayer, service.

Court files show history of threats

- JOHN LYNCH

A 60-year-old Little Rock man with a history of criminal bullying has been sentenced to 12 years in prison.

Sentencing papers filed Thursday by deputy prosecutor Sam Jackson show that Carl Dean Wynn Jr. received the sentence, three years short of the maximum penalty, from Pulaski County Circuit Judge Herb Wright, who found Wynn guilty as charged with terroristi­c threatenin­g, a Class D felony.

The charge stems from a May 25, 2017, confrontat­ion between Wynn and a neighbor, 40-year-old Joshua LaFever, in front of LaFever’s home on Asbury Road, court filings show. Wynn lived at 518 Asbury, court records show.

LaFever told detectives that he was having his roof replaced and that Wynn became angry because most workers in the crew LaFever had hired were Hispanic men. The younger man said he was in his pickup and was about to drive away when Wynn walked up, yanked the door open and started jabbing him in the chest with his finger, calling LaFever and the workers racial slurs, court files show.

Wynn demanded that LaFever get out of his truck and fight him. When LaFever refused and told Wynn to leave him alone, Wynn said he was going to kill him, his wife and two children, and he again used racial slurs, files show.

Wynn left and LaFever went into his house, locked the doors and called 911. While LaFever was waiting for police, Wynn returned and told him that he was going to need 24-hour security, then left again before po

lice arrived, court files show.

A witness, 22-year-old Danielle Paul, confirmed LaFever’s account to police, telling investigat­ors that she saw Wynn open the door to LaFever’s pickup, poke him in the chest and call the younger man names while making threats.

The incident mirrors a run-in with the law that Wynn had in the fall of 2006, which resulted in a felony conviction for impersonat­ing a federal agent and state charges of misdemeano­r criminal mischief for which he received probation and fines.

The charges came out of accusation­s that Wynn had mounted a harassment campaign against Graham Smith Constructi­on on Kanis Road in Little Rock.

Federal court records show that the company’s owner gave police a surveillan­ce video that showed an unidentifi­ed person throwing spikes from a dark automobile onto the driveway of the business. The owner also reported seeing a green Jeep, bearing an emblem similar to that of the United States Border Patrol, parked at a nearby residence along with a black automobile that resembled the vehicle in the surveillan­ce video. The emblem on the Jeep included a portion of the great seal of the United States and the words “United States of America Citizens Task Force,” an emblem that also appeared on the faxes received by the constructi­on company.

Investigat­ors determined that Wynn resided there, and surveillan­ce video from later dates showed a person matching Wynn’s descriptio­n at the location of the business when additional spikes were placed on the driveway.

Federal agents arrested Wynn in December 2006, and in Wynn’s green Jeep they discovered spike sticks like those that damaged tires at the constructi­on company. Investigat­ors also seized official-looking badges and shirts along with a bullet-resistant vest from his home. Some of the seized items included green caps with yellow letters reading “U.S. Border Patrol” and similarly colored signs declaring “US Border Patrol Observatio­n Agent.”

Little Rock police reported that Wynn had faxed letters to the company, with an emblem similar to the one on his Jeep, claiming the company was under investigat­ion because of its hiring practices. Wynn, then as now an out-of-work carpenter, had complained the company hired illegal migrants who kept him from working for years.

Wynn was sentenced to a year of federal probation in August 2007 in an agreement with federal prosecutor­s that called for him to plead guilty to the impersonat­ion charge in exchange for the dismissal of a charge of possession of body armor by a violent felon.

Three months after Wynn was sentenced, federal prosecutor­s moved to revoke his probation, reporting that a U.S. emblem attached to his vehicle hadn’t been removed, despite that being a condition of his probation. Prosecutor­s also complained that he hadn’t complied with other conditions of his probation, including submitting a DNA sample and undergoing counseling.

The allegation­s led to Wynn being sentenced in December 2007 to a year in federal prison followed by a year of supervised release. He was released from federal prison in September 2008. Since then, he’s twice been convicted of misdemeano­r terroristi­c threatenin­g.

He received a one-year suspended sentence and was fined $2,340 after being convicted at a trial in October 2018 for sending a threatenin­g text message to his stepsister Lisa Johnson, 49, of North Little Rock in May 2017. According to an arrest affidavit, Wynn described how he tried to persuade his father to kill Johnson’s mother, describing what would have been a “grotesque” murder. Wynn followed that descriptio­n with the statement, “My point is I am willing to kill.”

Files show Wynn also texted that he would send “gangsters” he met in prison to “do his dirty work,” stating that “I am going to hurt you, and you will live in pain the rest of your life. I am coming after you from all directions.”

In July 2015 in Garland County, he pleaded guilty to a terroristi­c threatenin­g charge, reduced from a felony, in exchange for a year of unsupervis­ed probation. That case was based on threatenin­g emails that Wynn sent to Weyerhaeus­er Co. at 810 Whittingto­n Ave. in Hot Springs after the timberland company refused to sell Wynn a Saline County property under the conditions he wanted.

“Sell me the property. Don’t be stupid and make me come to your office. Don’t force me to fight you,” he said in an email to Weyerhaeus­er employee Lon Moore, court files show.

Warned by lawyers for the Washington-based company against sending such messages and told that Weyerhaeus­er would never do business with him, Wynn responded to Jim Johnston, an assistant general counsel, that “I don’t want the land any more. I wanted [Weyerhaeus­er].”

“Disgruntle­d people do crazy things. Disgruntle­d postal workers do to [sic]. After all this trouble and the terrible future I see, I could never live there. I will see you soon. I will see all of you soon,” Wynn said.

Federal filings show his criminal history includes three conviction­s for terroristi­c threats prior to 2006, which were based on an incident in which Wynn mailed portions of a bomb and a sketch of the bomb to an Arkansas man with a note that said, “I will spare no expense to get you dead bastard”; a telephone call in which Wynn threatened a woman by saying that he was going to shoot her and hide her body; and an assault against several detention officers with a phone handset and a wall phone’s cord.

Wynn’s record also included a conviction for marijuana traffickin­g, which resulted from a search at Wynn’s residence that turned up marijuana, scales, three handguns, three assault rifles, two .22-caliber rifles, two shotguns, brass knuckles, a bullet-resistant vest, a scanner, walkie-talkies and night vision goggles.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States