HAYNEVILLE. Ala. (AP) - A teenager admitted to fatally shooting an Alabama sheriff who was attempting to disperse loiterers at a gas station, a state investigator testified Monday.
Lt. Shawn Loughridge of the State Bureau of Investigation testified in a preliminary hearing that 18-year-old William Chase Johnson admitted after being arrested that he shot Lowndes County Sheriff John Williams Sr.
Johnson is charged with capital murder in the sheriff’s death.
Store security video showed the sheriff arriving at a gas station and attempting to disperse a noisy crowd that was blocking gas pumps, the investigator said. He said witnesses indicated Johnson first approached Williams in an “aggressive” manner, and that the sheriff told him to return to his vehicle. The sheriff was shot after approaching Johnson’s black Silverado truck, Loughridge testified.
“”You see the sheriff fall to the ground,” he testified.
Williams was shot once in face, with the bullet entering between his lip and chin, the investigator said.
The testimony was the first glimpse of evidence in the capital murder case. Williams was shot and killed Nov. 23 in the county where he served as sheriff. Johnson was arrested several hours later after returning to the scene.
Johnson is the son of a sheriff’s deputy in neighboring Montgomery County. An arrest warrant alleges he was under the influence of alcohol or drugs at the time of the shooting.
During the brief hearing, defense lawyers appeared to raise the possibility that Johnson did not know Williams was sheriff. Loughridge testified that witnesses said Williams announced himself as sheriff, including to Johnson, as he was asking the crowd to disperse. However, on cross-examination, the investigator said the sheriff was in an unmarked county truck and did not have his blue lights running. He was wearing a baseball cap, jacket and tan pants at the time of the shooting.
The sheriff was not responding to a call that went through dispatch when he arrived at the gas station, the investigator testified. He said Williams appeared to be responding to a problem he saw as loiterers played loud music and blocked access to the gas station pumps.
The sheriff did not draw his weapon, the investigator testified, A woman was injured at the gas station when the sheriff’s son fired, Loughridge testified.
Shackled and wearing a black and white jail uniform, Johnson was escorted under a heavy law enforcement presence into the crowded courtroom. The hearing was held at the county courthouse across the street from the gas station where Williams was shot.
District Judge Tom Sport, who took over the case after a local judge recused himself, ruled there was enough evidence to send the case to grand jury. He denied a defense request for bond.
Sometimes known as “Big John” for his towering frame, the 62-year-old sheriff was a beloved figure in the county where he spent decades in law enforcement before becoming sheriff. More than 2,000 mourners attended his memorial service in Montgomery.
Memorial flowers are still displayed at the corner of the QV gas station where Williams was killed. A sign there reads “Big John Forever In Our Hearts.” Some cars display bumper stickers reading “#45Strong Big John” a reference to the county number and the sheriff’s nickname.
Leanne Harrell, the co-owner of the convenience store, said the sheriff was a fixture in the county.
“I called him the energizer bunny … It seemed like he was everywhere, taking care of things,” she said.
“He cared about children, and he would give them second chances. He wanted them to be better,” she said.
This story has been corrected to show that the presiding judge was Judge Tom Sport.
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