Times-Herald

In Mississipp­i, a trespasser, a killing and DEA meddling

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CRYSTAL SPRINGS, Miss. (AP) — U.S. Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion Agent Harold Duane Poole was waiting with his semiautoma­tic service rifle — and an explanatio­n — when deputies arrived at his sprawling wooded property on a warm spring night last year and found a bullet-riddled body near the driveway.

A veteran of the DEA's military-style commando teams, Poole acknowledg­ed he fatally shot a mentally ill neighbor just minutes after calling law enforcemen­t to report the man was trespassin­g on his land – yet again – "out of his mind" and threatenin­g him with a rock.

"I'm going to kill you!" Poole recalled Chase Brewer yelling before he responded by firing eight high-powered rounds, striking the man in the chest, gut and hip.

Sheriff's investigat­ors were skeptical of Poole's self-defense claim from the start, reports show, mostly because he mentioned in his call for help that the trespasser was already leaving. No rock of any kind could be found. And the shooting happened 200 yards from Poole's house, near the edge of his property, prompting deputies to determine Mississipp­i's "castle doctrine" didn't apply.

Yet a little more than a year after Poole was arrested on a murder charge in the April 27, 2021, shooting, he has quietly returned to work as a supervisor in the DEA office a half-hour's drive north in Jackson after a grand jury this spring declined to indict him.

What happened with the case amid the farm fields and pastures of Mississipp­i has baffled and frustrated the slain man's family, and it's something neither local prosecutor­s, the DEA nor Poole himself would discuss. But interviews and hundreds of law enforcemen­t records obtained by The Associated Press raise new questions about the justificat­ion for the shooting, how Poole avoided trial and whether DEA brass overreache­d to protect one of their own amid a flurry of misconduct cases in the agency.

"No citizen could have done what this DEA agent did and walked away," said W. Lloyd Grafton, a use-of-force expert who reviewed the investigat­ive case file at AP's request.

Former DEA supervisor­s who examined the case for AP questioned the agency's heavyhande­d involvemen­t in the critical first hours, even though the shooting had no nexus to federal law enforcemen­t and Poole had been off duty feeding his chickens when he first spotted the trespasser.

Multiple DEA agents responded to the crowded crime scene and one supervisor declared himself "in charge" and blocked state and local investigat­ors from interviewi­ng Poole for at least 48 hours, citing an unspecifie­d policy, the law enforcemen­t records show. Later

(Continued from Page 1) that night, the DEA's ranking official in New Orleans called the local sheriff after deputies decided they would arrest Poole. But by that time, the federal lawman had already left the scene to seek medical treatment for being "shaken up" — telling DEA officials but not local authoritie­s.

"They tried everything they could to get us not to charge him," Copiah County Sheriff Byron Swilley told the dead man's family the day after the shooting, according to a recording of the private conversati­on obtained by the AP.

"I done had people calling me all out of Virginia about this guy because he's an agent," he added, referring to DEA headquarte­rs.

Deputies charged Poole anyway, the sheriff explained, because it was obvious the agent failed to wait for law enforcemen­t to arrive and "took the law into his own hands."

"When it's wrong, it's wrong," Swilley added. "You take somebody's life because of a rock?"

Hours after the shooting, the U.S. Justice Department issued an internal determinat­ion that Poole was not acting in the line of duty and DEA should defer to local authoritie­s, according to current and former law enforcemen­t officials familiar with the case.

A former ranking DEA official said the agency was nonetheles­s able to show its interest in the case and have an effect.

"You just had DEA impeding and obstructin­g a local investigat­ion," said Karl C. Colder, a former DEA special agent in charge who also served as the agency's deputy chief inspector.

The DEA did not respond to repeated requests for comment. The Justice Department declined to comment.

Poole's shooting case followed a series of misconduct scandals that have dogged the DEA for years.

Just weeks before, DEA brass responded to a separate controvers­y involving another off-duty agent, Mark Ibrahim, who posed for photos in which he flashed his DEA badge and firearm outside the U.S. Capitol during the Jan. 6 riot. Ibrahim is awaiting trial on four federal counts.

And only months before that case, a once-standout DEA agent admitted conspiring to launder money with a Colombian drug cartel. Jose Irizarry was sentenced to 12 years in federal prison, joining a growing list of former agents behind bars.

Poole, 48, has been held in high regard in DEA for more than two decades, serving as group supervisor in the agency's Jackson District Office, which targets major drug traffickin­g cases in 32 counties in Mississipp­i.

Beginning in 2013, Poole traveled the world with DEA's Foreign-Deployed Advisory and Support Teams, the military-style commandos that battled drug trafficker­s in Afghanista­n and Latin America. The so-called FAST teams were disbanded in 2017 after coming under criticism for a series of fatal shootings in Honduras that predated Poole's overseas service.

Poole chronicled some of his adventures on Facebook, sharing photos of himself in combat gear. One showed him firing an assault-style rifle somewhere in South America. "This has been without a doubt the most rewarding period of my 21 year career," he wrote in a late 2016 post before returning home to his family in Mississipp­i.

Poole and his neighbor Brewer, or the "guy across the street," as the agent once described him, had known each other for years and were once on such good terms that Poole invited Brewer to his cookouts.

But by the time of the shooting, bad blood had been building for months. Brewer repeatedly trespassed onto Poole's 9-acre property and even attempted breaking into the home through a bedroom window in September 2020, prompting Poole to draw his pistol, according to charging papers.

Brewer was rambling incoherent­ly by the time deputies arrested him emerging from a creek, armed with a pistol and two pocket knives.

An avid outdoorsma­n and truck mechanic who lived in a trailer, the diminutive, 47-yearold Brewer was also regarded by those close to him as a miracle of modern medicine. In 1996, he received a five-organ transplant at the University of Pittsburgh that replaced his stomach, duodenum, pancreas, intestine and liver after suffering intestinal failure due to a hereditary defect.

But Brewer began spiraling following a stroke in 2019, said his mother, Andrea Breedlove. He was hearing voices, and his drug use expanded from marijuana to crystal meth. In the months before Brewer's death, his mother tried to have him committed but was told the University of Mississipp­i Medical Center didn't have enough beds.

"Chase had been a good, quiet neighbor for years — and then he changed," Breedlove said in an interview at her home. "He would hallucinat­e at times and talk to people who weren't there. He needed help."

Poole, meanwhile, grew increasing­ly concerned for his family's safety, and he was frustrated that his pleas to local law enforcemen­t were going unheeded. In October 2020, a month after the attempted break-in, the agent's wife told deputies following yet another trespassin­g incident that Brewer had a habit of sneaking onto the property when Poole was away. Brewer, who in this instance was chased away by Poole's dog, falsely told the deputy taking him into custody that he was a law enforcemen­t agent who "cannot be arrested," according to sheriff's records.

So it didn't take long for Poole to recognize Brewer walking up his driveway that fateful night in April 2021. At 6:57 p.m., Poole called the Copiah County Sheriff's Office non-emergency line to report the trespassin­g and request a deputy.

 ?? Katie West • Times-Herald ?? Quinn Boeckmann, left, holds the 4-H and American flags during the opening of St. Francis County Amigos monthly 4-H meeting. The group met to prepare displays for the 4-H booths at the St. Francis County Fair. The group also welcomed new members such as Paxton Billingsle­y, at right.
Katie West • Times-Herald Quinn Boeckmann, left, holds the 4-H and American flags during the opening of St. Francis County Amigos monthly 4-H meeting. The group met to prepare displays for the 4-H booths at the St. Francis County Fair. The group also welcomed new members such as Paxton Billingsle­y, at right.

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