Gun-toting
attorney
foils burglary
By
Jeanne Houck, Post staff reporter
Publication date: 10-21-00
Tom Beiting was
headed downstairs to his law office one morning this week from the
second-floor apartment in the remodeled Newport mansion he owns when
he was startled by the sound of the back door opening.
Beiting turned
to see a man he did not know silhouetted in the doorway.
But Beiting
recognized the case of Bud Light the man was holding because it was
the same case of beer Beiting had bought two weeks ago for a party
and stowed in his refrigerator.
''I recognized
my color, portable TV next to the door, also,'' Beiting said.
Beiting said
the man, later identified as Daniel Young Jackson of Louisville,
dropped the beer and reached for his pocket, so Beiting drew a 9mm
semi-automatic pistol he'd clipped onto his belt.
''I couldn't
think of anything else to say but, 'You're under arrest,' '' Beiting
recalled. ''He immediately wet his pants.''
Telling Jackson
- who turned out to be unarmed - he was under arrest leapt more
naturally to Beiting's lips than it would to most people.
Beiting spent
15 years in police work.
He was chief of
Dayton police from 1970 to 1977 and was a criminal investigator for
the U.S. Army and an intelligence officer for the U.S. Defense
Department.
But Beiting has
been practicing law since 1985 and said his confrontation with
Jackson about 6:45 a.m. Tuesday convinced him he made a good career
move.
''I was scared
to death,'' Beiting said. ''It's been 19 years since my last felony
arrest, and it can be 19 more before my next one.''
After Beiting
pulled his gun - for which he says he has a state permit to conceal
and carry - he ordered Jackson to sit in a chair with hands clasped
atop his head.
Beiting had
Jackson hold the pose until Newport Sgt. Mark Crank arrived.
Crank charged
Jackson with burglary. If convicted, Jackson faces five to 10 years
in state prison. Jackson has pleaded innocent.
Police
discovered the 37-year-old Jackson, who described himself as an
unemployed riverboat deckhand, was wanted on charges of alco hol
intoxication in McCracken and Daviess counties.
Campbell
District Court records show Jackson has convictions dating back to
1996 in Jefferson County for resisting arrest, alcohol intoxication,
possession of marijuana and possession of drug paraphernalia.
Beiting said
Jackson has a record of assault, theft and drug charges in Ohio and
Florida, which is one reason Beiting is happy he was carrying his
gun.
''He's a
convicted felon with police assaults on his record, as well as
resisting arrest,'' Beiting said.
Beiting said
Jackson apparently got into the building, which includes two
apartments in addition to Beiting's, through an unlocked back door.
After Jackson's
arrest, Beiting said he found two empty, cold beer cans on the floor
of his living room - where he kept his television - leading the
lawyer to believe Jackson tossed back a couple cans while Beiting
slept in an adjacent bedroom.
Jackson is in
the Campbell County Jail and has been assigned a public defender.
Source:
Kentucky Post
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