The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Settlement near in case of pot suspect killed by state bulldozer

- By Michael Rubinkam

The estate of a man who was run over by a bulldozer while being chased by Pennsylvan­ia State Police for illegally growing a handful of pot plants is nearing settlement of its federal wrongful death lawsuit against the state.

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 suit 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.

A federal judge overseeing the case has scheduled a settlement conference for next month. The hearing will review “the settlement of the wrongful death ... and allocation of settlement proceeds,” according to a Feb. 4 order by U.S. District Judge Jeffrey Schmehl.

The filing does not include any details about the pending settlement, including the amount to be paid. The state attorney general’s office, which is representi­ng both agencies in court, had no immediate comment Monday.

The family’s lawyer, Jordan Strokovsky, declined comment on the settlement but said: “We performed a very thorough investigat­ion and the family is pleased with our findings.”

The July 2018 chase developed as Longenecke­r and his friend tended their pot plants in a small clearing on state game lands. A game commission worker, operating a bulldozer in the area, spotted their car parked in a field where vehicles weren’t allowed and called police.

The friend surrendere­d, but Longenecke­r fled, disappeari­ng into the thick vegetation.

State police began a search, and a state police helicopter pilot, hovering overhead, spotted Longenecke­r in the underbrush. The suit said that state police Cpl. Michael Taylor asked the bulldozer’s operator, Mark Weiss, if he could climb aboard and blaze a trail in Longenecke­r’s direction. The pair set off on a “machine of death,” the suited said.

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. The chopper pilot said he had Longenecke­r in view the entire time, noting in his deposition “that it would be impossible for Mr. Longenecke­r to crawl under the back of the bulldozer before the bulldozer turned left,” the lawsuit said.

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