Troy man found guilty in road-rage incident
SCOTT SHINDLEDECKER | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 5 hours, 28 minutes AGO
A Troy man was found guilty for his role in a road-rage incident involving a gun nearly three years ago on U.S. 2 near the Kootenai River Falls.
Jurors, 10 women and two men, determined Michael B. O’Toole, 70, was guilty of two felony counts of criminal endangerment following a three-day trial that ended April 29. They also declared him not guilty of one endangerment count.
O’Toole was first charged with one felony count of assault with a weapon. But that was amended following the death of the victim, Brian Hamond, a retired law enforcement officer from Spokane, Washington. He died May 11, 2025.
Hamond was a detective who helped solve Washington's oldest homicide case. It involved the 1959 murder of 9-year-old Candice Rogers.
According to the Spokesman-Review, John Reigh Hoff was identified as the killer in 2021 through DNA evidence. Hoff, 31, killed himself with a gunshot to the head in 1970.
O’Toole, a former California resident, has been free after posting $25,000 bail and will remain so until his June 22 sentencing. County attorney Marcia Boris sought to have the defendant detained in the county jail, but District Judge Matt Cuffe denied the request.
Boris was pleased with the verdict and the work of the jurors. She also said O’Toole was offered a plea deal, but he declined it.
The prosecution called eight witnesses, including two law enforcement officers and the three men who helped stop the incident.
Boris expressed her admiration for the three young men who witnessed the incident as it happened and helped get O’Toole under control before law enforcement arrived.
“Out of nowhere, these big Montana boys come out and pinned him down and got the gun away and that was pretty much it,” the retired officer told county deputy Luke Hauke following the incident.
Hauke asked the victim how he felt having a gun stuck in his face.
“I’m retired law enforcement myself out of Spokane, I was 30 years on the police department. That’s the third time I’ve had a gun stuck in my face and it’s pretty unsettling.”
“I’ve got a great deal of appreciation for what those men did, putting themselves at risk,” Boris said. “Who knows what would have happened if they didn’t get involved?”
Boris, in her closing argument to the jury, argued that O’Toole ignored several “off ramps” he could have taken, rather than confront the man and his wife with a gun, a .22 caliber Jiminez Arms with a magazine and six rounds of ammo. A live round was chambered at the time of the incident.
“If the defendant doesn’t bring his gun with him, we aren’t here today,” Boris said. “He also admitted in a video while he spoke with deputy Hauke that he shouldn’t have pulled the gun.
“The defendant (O’Toole) had to take a class to get a concealed weapon permit and he utterly failed when he pulled a gun on Mr. Hammonds,” Boris said.
In his closing argument, defense attorney Maury Solomon said no one was arguing the threatening or obnoxious behavior O’Toole engaged in. He also argued successfully that saw one criminal endangerment charge result in a not guilty verdict.
“While he may have missed many off ramps, he did return the gun to his pocket,” Solomon said. “Mr. O’Toole couldn’t have known the Hansons were at risk. We don’t know where the gun was pointed, we don’t know any features of this gun, whether it could have went off, we don’t know where the gun was pointed.”
The Hansons were a couple driving west on U.S. 2 in the area of the incident when it occurred.
Solomon also argued that O’Toole did have the right to pull the gun.
“A gun in a man’s hand is no more dangerous than one sitting on a table,” Solomon said. “Pointing a gun is not creating a significant risk of death or injury. By putting it away, it was recognition of a stupid mistake.”
Boris, in her rebuttal to the jury, said, “a person acts knowingly when they engage in conduct likely to cause bodily injury. What other purpose is there to point a loaded gun at someone?”
According to charging documents, county sheriff’s deputy Luke Hauke was called on the afternoon of July 14, 2023, to the construction zone pullout where workers were doing rock scaling work on the cliffs near the falls.
An eyewitness to the alleged incident said a man, later identified as O’Toole, had pointed a gun at another man,
According to Hauke’s supplemental narrative, he spoke to O’Toole who said the incident began, “prior to coming into Troy.” O’Toole also said the other man struck him first and he believed the man had been drinking.
Hauke then spoke with a man who called 911 to report the incident. The witness said he was driving west on U.S. 2 when he saw what was happening and turned around to come to the scene. The witness said he looked in his rearview mirror and saw O’Toole, “getting in the man’s face.” He couldn’t tell if O’Toole had a gun, but his wife said he did.
She told Deputy Hauke that O’Toole pointed a gun at her husband’s head. The witness also said by the time she and her husband got back to the scene, three other men had contained” (O’Toole).”
Deputy Hauke then spoke to the victim’s wife. She said the incident started in the 70 mph zone west of Troy as she and her husband drove toward Troy. She said O’Toole was driving ahead of her after pulling onto the highway. She said he was driving 63 so, “I backed off and I stayed at his speed, but I kept checking to see if I could get around him to pass him to do 70.”
The woman continued, saying she slowed down as they came into Troy. She said O’Toole stopped dead in the road, “To the point where cars were coming behind us.”
“I laid on my horn and he opened his window and started shouting, and I backed off, slowed down to 45, did the 35, did the 25 through town,” the woman said. She also said when they drove through Troy, O’Toole pointed at each of the speed limit signs.
According to the court document, when the drivers came to the construction zone, the woman said she stopped at least 40 feet behind O’Toole. She said O’Toole was pulled slightly off the road into the pullout, but she had remained in the lane of traffic.
“All of a sudden, he (O’Toole) was getting out of his car,” she said. She also said O’Toole headed to the passenger side of her vehicle and her husband got out of the vehicle and told him, “Don’t you approach my wife.”
She said the two men scuffled and ended up on the ground. She also told the deputy that O’Toole lifted his shirt up. She said that three men came running up and subdued O’Toole. She also said she didn’t notice the gun until seeing it on the ground and one of the trio picked it up.
Deputy Hauke then spoke to the retired Spokane police officer. The man said O’Toole had tried to gouge his eyes out, “when we were on the ground.”
The victim said he didn’t need an ambulance, but his spinal injury causes him, “poor balance and little to no feeling” in his hands and feet and he takes a lot of medications.
When they arrived at the work zone, the man said O’Toole got out of his car and he got out of his. He said they argued before the defendant shoved him, backed up and pulled a gun out of his pocket and pointed it at the man from a few feet away.
The man said he told O’Toole to get away, but the defendant allegedly chambered a round and stuck the gun in his face.
“Then, he (O’Toole) put it back in his pocket and said, ‘Let’s just go, and he squared up with me and started to throw punches. He didn’t hit me with any, but I hit him a good one, then he got in close and that’s when I took him to the ground. Out of nowhere, these big Montana boys come out and pinned him down and got the gun away and that was pretty much it.”
Deputy Hauke then went to O’Toole because he said he was having a heart attack. The officer reported calling dispatch to send an ambulance. Hauke said he didn’t see any obvious signs of the man having a heart attack and then they spoke about the incident.
“Michael (O’Toole) asked if he was under arrest and I told him he was not. I turned the A/C up in the rear compartment of my patrol vehicle. Michael seemed happy to get inside my patrol vehicle and thanked me,” Hauke wrote in his report. “I asked him how he knew he was having a heart attack and he said he wasn’t and he didn’t want to stand in the sun.”
In a court filing regarding the video recording of O’Toole when he was questioned by Hauke, the defendant said he was going to the hospital because of a blood clot.
But Boris said no evidence of the medical condition was offered at trial.
According to Hauke’s narrative, O’Toole said the other man had been drinking, put his hands on him first and then he pulled his gun.
Deputy Hauke then spoke to the three men who assisted the alleged victim at the scene.
The driver of the pickup truck said they thought the men were buddies before they reported seeing O’Toole holding a gun. The driver of the truck said O’Toole dropped the gun during the scuffle and they pushed and kicked it away. They reported grabbing O’Toole’s arms and hands, got him up and sat him in the grass.”
O’Toole was checked by emergency medical technicians at the scene and refused treatment. He received approval to drive himself to Cabinet Peaks Medical Center in Libby. After O’Toole was declared OK by hospital staff, Hauke spoke to him. O’Toole maintained the victim put his hands on him first and was the reason he drew his gun.
In the second interview at the hospital between Hauke and O’Toole, the defendant allegedly said he wanted to file charges against the men who disarmed him.
Deputy Hauke seized the gun, a .22 caliber Jimenez Arms with a magazine and six rounds of ammo, at the scene of the incident.
He later spoke to the victim, who said medical staff at the hospital in Kalispell said he had two rib fractures. He said he wasn’t sure if the injuries occurred when O’Toole allegedly hit him or when he took the defendant to the ground.
A conviction for criminal endangerment may result in a maximum sentence of 10 years in the Montana State Prison. Because a gun was used during the offense, O’Toole also faces a 10-year term.
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