Texarkana Gazette

The Spitfire of Lexington is still raising heck, singing karaoke

- By Hannah Covington Star Tribune (Minneapoli­s)

LEXINGTON, Minn.— The 87-year-old woman bellied up to the bar, sipping her usual: a can of 7-Up in a beer koozie brought from home.

Everyone here knows Betty Dockham. They also know that she has a corner on Patsy Cline’s “Crazy” during karaoke. (Request it at your own risk.)

Dockham is a regular at the Lino Lakes American Legion hall, a short drive from her home in Lexington.

She’s not the mayor, but she may be one of the area’s best-known residents, a formidable force in a 5-foot frame.

Lately, health issues have slowed Dockham down, and her absence has been felt from City Hall to the grocery store. Neighbors have noticed the quiet. Some in town seem surprised to find that even she is mortal.

“She’s so ornery, she’ll probably live forever,” said longtime neighbor Larry Murphy.

In Lexington, her omnipresen­ce at City Hall is legendary. It may be all those decades of raising heck in City Council meetings or the years spent raising Cain in her neighborho­od.

At 81, a property line dispute landed the widow in jail. Her mug shot appeared in Busted, a paper that prints booking photos.

Her picture popped up in Busted’s 2011 Mother’s Day feature.

The mother of seven has drawn her fair share of critics as well as admirers, cutting quite a path through her town of 2,000, residents and city officials say.

“She had no problem telling us if she thought we were wrong,” said former Mayor Dot Heifort, who was involved in Lexington leadership for nearly 30 years. “She has always been this feisty and opinionate­d.”

For decades, she warned council members about traffic hazards, potential conflicts of interest in developmen­t deals and questionab­le city spending. Residents still recall the hullabaloo over a petition Dockham helped spearhead in the early 1990s to consolidat­e Lexington with Blaine.

It was all done, Dockham said, in an effort to better the town she loves.

“I tell it like it is,” she said. You may not find her at many civic gatherings anymore, but Dockham still makes her presence known every week at the nearby Legion hall for karaoke.

During a recent singing contest, she sat at the bar and weighed her competitio­n. Performers belted hailMary notes. But the spitfire with the walker, the one who favors classic country crooners, didn’t flinch.

Intimidate­d by these youngsters?

Not a chance, she said. “I haven’t even gotten started.” ‘I tell it like it is’

Even when she was growing up, folks in her hometown of Austin, Minn., knew not to cross the pretty girl with the red hair.

But that spunk had knocked her onto the wrong side of the law, like in a yearslong dispute with a n eighbor about whose property ended where.

This protracted tug-of-war accounts for much of her rap sheet, with conviction­s that range from disorderly conduct to trespassin­g to building illegal fences. It also led to multiple jail bookings in the past seven years.

“We only jailed her, frankly, when we had absolutely no other option under the law,” said Lt. Russell Blanck of the Centennial Lakes Police Department, which patrols Lexington and two other cities.

During one police encounter, Dockham, then 81, even tried fleeing an officer on foot.

“She can run pretty quick,” said one neighbor, declining to be named for fear of retributio­n. “You can’t make this up.”

Neighbors say they have reason to be wary.

Murphy, who has lived across the street for about 30 years, said Dockham has called the cops on him before.

“I can’t say she’s totally evil, but she’s damn well near it,” he said. Softer side

Regulars at the Lino

Lakes American Legion say Dockham has a sweeter side, too. They champion her

 ?? Aaron Lavinsky/ Minneapoli­s Star Tribune/ TNS ?? Betty Dockham, 87, sings Loretta Lynn’s “Coal Miner’s Daughter” during a karaoke contest on May 9 in Lino Lakes, Minn.
Aaron Lavinsky/ Minneapoli­s Star Tribune/ TNS Betty Dockham, 87, sings Loretta Lynn’s “Coal Miner’s Daughter” during a karaoke contest on May 9 in Lino Lakes, Minn.

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