The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

State to pay $475K to family of killed suspect

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The lawsuit involves a man who died underneath a bulldozer that state police had used to chase him.

READING, PA. >> The state of Pennsylvan­ia will pay $475,000 to the estate of a man who died underneath a bulldozer that Pennsylvan­ia State Police had used to chase him for growing a handful of marijuana plants, according to a settlement revealed in court Thursday.

Gregory Longenecke­r, a 51-year-old short-order cook and Grateful Dead fan, had fled into thick brush after being caught growing 10 marijuana plants on public land near Reading. His body was found under the treads of a Pennsylvan­ia Game Commission bulldozer that state police had commandeer­ed in pursuit.

The lawsuit by Longenecke­r’s family contended that state police and the game commission took “crazy and lethal action” against an unarmed man who posed no threat, then destroyed or withheld evidence to cover it up.

The plaintiffs’ attorney, Jordan Strokovsky, said outside court Thursday that Longenecke­r’s family is pleased with the settlement but wants “sweeping reforms to prevent such an excessive show of force and tragedy like this in the future.”

A federal judge is reviewing the settlement and is expected to sign off.

A prosecutor who investigat­ed Longenecke­r’s death concluded that troopers acted reasonably. Authoritie­s have publicly contended that Longenecke­r was high on methamphet­amine, crawled under the back of the bulldozer when it stopped briefly, and was crushed to death when it started moving again and made a left turn.

The lawsuit called that explanatio­n ludicrous, and witness statements cast doubt on the official version of how he got caught under the machine.

Strokovsky demanded an investigat­ion by the state attorney general’s office, accusing the Berks County district attorney’s office and state police of misleading the public.

“Rather than admit what happened and apologize for their excessive tactics ... state police, with the assistance of the Berks County district attorney’s office, disregarde­d evidence and provided a ridiculous and unfounded conclusion” to show that “law enforcemen­t did nothing

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