Tennessee DA faces charge after firing at fugitive and hitting a home 
		with family inside
		
		 
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		 [December 18, 2024]  
		NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — A district attorney in Tennessee 
		is facing a reckless endangerment charge after shooting at a fugitive 
		several times and hitting a home that had a woman and her three children 
		inside. 
		 
		The Tennessee Bureau of Investigation announced the grand jury charge 
		Monday against District Attorney Chris Stanford. His district covers Van 
		Buren and Warren counties. 
		 
		The indictment says that as the incident unfolded in Smithville on Nov. 
		21, a bullet Stanford shot from his handgun went through a front porch 
		patio chair, through an exterior wall and into the living room wall of 
		the home. The woman and children weren't hurt. 
		 
		Smithville is about 60 miles (97 kilometers) southeast of Nashville. 
		 
		The indictment says that Stanford fired the shot “unlawfully, 
		intentionally and recklessly." There was no immediate threat to him or 
		others, he wasn't aiming the handgun, and “just held it out and shot” 
		without using the gun's sights, the indictment adds. 
		 
		Following his indictment, Stanford surrendered at the DeKalb County Jail 
		and was released after posting a $10,000 bond, TBI said. A message left 
		with Stanton’s office was not immediately returned Tuesday. 
		 
		The Warren County Sheriff's Office described the circumstances leading 
		to the incident last month. In a social media post, it said authorities 
		were pursuing suspects after finding three dead bodies at a house and at 
		an adjacent building. 
		 
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            The suspects were sighted in DeKalb County, the sheriff's office 
			said. One of them was taken into custody without incident. Stanford 
			and other law enforcement officials chased the other suspect, who 
			was a passenger in a car, the office said. 
			 
			While trying to help the suspect flee, the driver struck a homeland 
			security officer with the car, the sheriff's office said. 
			 
			In a statement last month to WTVF-TV, Stanford said he fired shots 
			in response to the homeland security agent being hit. No one was 
			shot when Stanford fired his gun. The homeland security officer was 
			injured and taken to the hospital, according to a social media post 
			by District Attorney Bryant Dunaway. 
			 
			“The vehicle then drove toward me and others, accelerating quickly. 
			I fired my service weapon in defense of myself and others at the 
			scene. Based upon my training and the circumstances that presented 
			themselves, I believe my actions were necessary and justified,” 
			Stanford said. 
			 
			Stanford also told the news station he has a state law enforcement 
			certification to carry his weapon at all times. 
			 
			The two suspects in the three deaths were taken into custody and 
			charged with criminal homicide, while the driver, also taken into 
			custody, faces felony evading arrest and aggravated assault charged, 
			according to the sheriff's office. 
			
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