The Arizona Republic

Questions persist on death of man, 107

- By Jeannie Nuss

PINE BLUFF, Ark. — When the time came to move 107-year-old Monroe Isadore to a new home, police say he resisted and barricaded himself inside. Authoritie­s tried using a camera to monitor him, along with negotiatin­g tactics, and finally gas to get him to come out. None of it worked. So, a SWAT team went inside and was greeted by gunfire, authoritie­s say. The team fired back, and Isadore died.

The weekend confrontat­ion raised a flurry of questions Monday as residents struggled to make sense of how someone known as a pleasant, churchgoin­g man who was hard of hearing and sometimes carried a cane had died in an explosive confrontat­ion. Did authoritie­s know how old he was? Did they follow proper procedure? Could they have done anything differentl­y?

“It’s just a big puzzle,” said Ivory Perry, who has known Isadore for decades.

The standoff began Saturday, according to a police report. Laurie Barlow, 48, of Lonoke, told officers she had gone to the house where Isadore was living temporaril­y to help him move to a new home. She said Isadore had previously been excited about the move but that when she arrived Isadore barricaded himself in a room.

“Ms. Barlow stated his granddaugh­ter finally got him to open the door and she went around to speak with Mr. Isadore, at that time she stated Mr. Isadore raised his arm and pointed a gun at her and stated ‘You better stop breaking in to my house,’ ” the report said.

After police moved Barlow and the granddaugh­ter across the street, Isadore fired at a door moments after police tried to contact him. A SWAT team, called out when negotiatio­ns failed, maneuvered a camera into the house to see how Isadore was armed, then stormed inside after deploying gas and a distractio­n device, the report said. When Isadore fired, the entry team fired back.

Police Sgt. David DeFoor said Monday that Isadore had been living at the home temporaril­y, but did not go into more detail.

Public Safety Personnel Retirement System investment staff members were paid $1.4 million in bonuses and other compensati­on between 2008 and 2012. The figure was incorrect because of a transcribi­ng error.

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