Troy chief of police cleared of wrongdoing
Canda Harbaugh | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 16 years, 1 month AGO
The state attorney general’s office recently cleared Troy’s chief of police of criminal wrongdoing related to a dispute the official had with a local gun club.
“The case file was submitted to an assistant attorney general,” said John Strandell, investigations bureau chief of the Montana Department of Justice Division of Criminal Investigation. “He did a review and determined that no criminal act was committed.”
Police chief Mitch Walters was investigated in August on allegations of felony theft when he refused to hand over property belonging to Cabinet Rifle and Pistol Club. He had been storing the club’s metal targets since last fall when the lease on its Troy shooting range wasn’t renewed. Members began practicing at a Libby shooting range, but he wanted the targets to stay in Troy.
“It was a civil matter from the beginning,” Walters said. “I knew it; they knew it. It only went to the state because they’re the agency that deals with these things.”
Though Walters gained the support of the Troy Shooting Club in his plight to keep Cabinet’s equipment for use of Troy residents, he eventually returned the equipment to Cabinet.
“It was clear to me that the battle wasn’t worth fighting for,” Walters said, “even though I had support of the local club here.”
Cabinet members pegged the value of the targets at $7,000 and Walters said the used equipment was worth less than $1,000.
Cabinet Rifle and Pistol Club had reported Walters to the Lincoln County Sheriff’s Office, which conducted a preliminary investigation. Sheriff Daryl Anderson then handed the case off to the state because of conflict-of-interest issues.
ARTICLES BY CANDA HARBAUGH
Flood 1169
By early afternoon flood victims began pumping water out of their basements. Don Emery, whose rental home is pictured, also began packing his belongings into a moving truck.
Flood 0893
Rosie Roberts looks outside her window on West 10th Street before evacuating her home. Minutes later, a stronger current of water broke through, causing authorities to close the street.
Flood 0992
Workers travel Nevada Avenue by way of back hoe. City and county crews, as well as a few contractors, helped break up the stream's ice with excavators in order to prevent further ice jams.