McLeod County, Minnesota, deputy Kenneth Reynolds shot Delvin Bethke's horse in Stewart, Minnesota.
Bethke says he heard 9 shots ring out. One horse was injured as it ran into a building to escape the shooting. The other horse had a wound which never healed. Bethke used a metal detector, which indicated metal inside the horse at the wound.
The horse died about a year later.
McLeod County Deputy Ken Reynolds Criminally Prosecuted
Ken Reynolds was criminally prosecuted for discharging a firearm in the city limits of Stewart.
At the trial Reynolds claimed he was shooting at a woodchuck. However, no woodchuck was found where he was shooting, only a cat which appeared to have died quite a while previously.
And even if he was shooting at a woodchuck -- it is still illegal to discharge a firearm in Stewart, Minnesota.
The jury conveniently found Reynolds "not guilty."
Bethke says he heard 9 shots ring out. One horse was injured as it ran into a building to escape the shooting. The other horse had a wound which never healed. Bethke used a metal detector, which indicated metal inside the horse at the wound.
The horse died about a year later.
McLeod County Deputy Ken Reynolds Criminally Prosecuted
Ken Reynolds was criminally prosecuted for discharging a firearm in the city limits of Stewart.
At the trial Reynolds claimed he was shooting at a woodchuck. However, no woodchuck was found where he was shooting, only a cat which appeared to have died quite a while previously.
And even if he was shooting at a woodchuck -- it is still illegal to discharge a firearm in Stewart, Minnesota.
The jury conveniently found Reynolds "not guilty."
Records of Public Servant Reynolds Hidden from the Public
The court records of the prosecution of Reynolds have also been conveniently sealed. The truth about a public servant is hidden from the public. All to protect a crooked cop.
$10,000 Per Month for Sheriff Service
The city of Stewart, Minnesota, pays the McLeod County sheriff $10,000 per month for police service. However, Stewart did nothing to stand up for its resident
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