N.H Officer Killed, attacker killed by passer-by

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Here's another article with some more info. Apparently the justification came when Floyd ordered Kenney to drop his weapon and Kenney reloaded.

And the officer's 2 girls who lost their Daddy.

Feud turned deadly in N.H.
Passerby guns down police officer's killer
By Michael Levenson and John M Guilfoil, Globe Correspondent | May 13, 2007

FRANCONIA, N.H. -- New Hampshire authorities said yesterday that they will not press charges against a former Marine who stepped into a deadly shooting and killed a 24-year-old high school dropout who had moments earlier fatally shot a police officer.

The former Marine, Gregory W. Floyd, 49, was driving with his son along Route 116 in Franconia on Friday night when he saw Liko Kenney, 24, shoot Franconia Police Corporal Bruce McKay, 48, four times in the torso. After Kenney drove his Toyota Celica over McKay as the officer lay on the ground, Floyd grabbed the officer's service weapon and shot and killed Kenney.

Authorities said the double shooting was the bloody climax of a long-simmering feud between McKay, a 12-year-veteran of the three-member department, and Kenney, a cousin of World Cup champion skier Bode Miller.

In 2003, Kenney was convicted of assaulting McKay, authorities said. Kenney had contended that McKay had assaulted him, breaking his jaw and leaving him in a coma, according to Bode Miller's father, Woody.

"It was a bad mixture waiting to happen," said Connie McKenzie , a nurse who said she had tried to ad minister CPR to McKay on the lawn in front of her 18th-century farmhouse on Route 116. "They hated each other."

New Hampshire's attorney general, Kelly A. Ayotte, said Floyd will not face charges because he was justified in using deadly force.

"Based on the results of the investigation, our conclusion is that Gregory Floyd's actions were justified based upon dangerous circumstances confronted with and efforts to assist McKay," Ayotte said at a news conference in Concord.

Captain Russell Conte of the New Hampshire State Police condemned the slaying of McKay, a New York native who had a 9-year-old daughter, Courtney, and in June was to marry his fiancée, who has a 14-year-old daughter, Kylea.

"Something this egregious affects everyone in law enforcement, and it is the ultimate act of defiance for someone to shoot a police officer when he's doing his duties," Conte said.

The attack unfolded Friday at about 6:30 p.m. after McKay stopped Kenney for speeding on Route 116, a two-lane country road dotted with wooden barns in this rugged, picturesque town 80 miles north of Concord.

Neighbors said Kenney was driving home from his job at a market in nearby Littleton with a friend, identified by authorities as Caleb Macaulay, 21. Kenney told McKay to "get another officer," and then he sped off, according to Ayotte. McKay gave chase in his cruiser, caught Kenney about a mile and a half down the road, and stopped his car in front of Kenney's car, forcing Kenney to stop. McKay then sprayed Kenney with OC spray, an irritant similar to pepper spray, and backed away from the vehicle, Ayotte said.

Kenney pulled out a .45-caliber handgun and shot McKay four times. As McKay stumbled across the road, bleeding, Kenney ran his vehicle over the dying officer, Ayotte said.

Floyd, who had been driving by in a Chevrolet Tahoe with his son, also named Gregory P. Floyd, saw the entire scene, Ayotte said. A video camera in McKay's cruiser also recorded the shooting, Ayotte said.

The elder Floyd drove his Tahoe into a spot between McKay and Kenney as a shield and told his son, who is in his late teens, to run to the officer's cruiser and radio for help.

The elder Floyd picked up McKay's gun from the ground and ordered Kenney to drop his weapon. Kenney refused, and Floyd saw Kenney appear to be reloading, Conte said. Floyd then shot and killed Kenney, Conte said.

The slayings brought to light a deep history of tensions between members of the Kenney family and McKay. In 2003, Kenney had challenged the assault charge, alleging that McKay had assaulted him and broken his jaw, Woody Miller said. But Kenney lost the case -- officials yesterday were unable to say what his punishment was -- because there were no witnesses to corroborate his account, Woody Miller said.

After the case, police had agreed that if McKay ever stopped Kenney, Kenney could request that another officer come to the scene, Woody Miller said. Bode Miller had also had confrontations with McKay, and had gone to court in 2005 after McKay ticketed him for driving 83 miles per hour in a 40- mile-per-hour zone. Bode Miller told Sports Illustrated at the time that he wanted "to try to get my fine reduced and to antagonize McKay."

The shootings reverberated throughout Franconia yesterday, where the American flag outside the white clapboard Town Hall was lowered to half-staff.

Kenney lived alone in a cabin built by his father in the woodlands off Route 116, just over the border in neighboring Easton. He raised chickens and turkeys and liked to ride his all-terrain vehicle, said his uncle, Bill Kenney.

The uncle said Kenney " had a rough life, a tough background, but it seemed like he was in the process of changing these past few weeks."

"I don't know what triggered that, but basically he's the type of guy that's an independent-minded fella. He doesn't buy people telling him what to do, maybe a little stubborn," Bill Kenney said yesterday . "He's basically a good-hearted kid. He'd had some trouble in his past and his upbringing as so many young people do, and he's a Kenney, and it's a family thing. We've been around here for hundreds of years basically . . . he's as native as you can get."

At Town Hall, about 20 residents gathered yesterday afternoon to mourn the death of McKay.

"He was just a nice guy," said Sally Small, the town administrative assistant. "Obviously he and Liko Kenney had issues, but there were just as many people who thought he was very professional. He was usually the officer who would prosecute cases at the court. He did his job."

Robert Thibault, town clerk in Easton and a former selectman, said he knows Floyd because Floyd had stopped into the town offices to have his truck registered. "He seems like a nice guy," said Thibault. "I'm glad somebody did something to try to stop Liko. It was a pretty brave thing to do. Unfortunately it was too late."

Steven Heath, owner of Franconia Village Store on Main Street, said Floyd walked into his shop yesterday at about 1:30 p.m., looking for copies of local newspapers.

Floyd was dressed in a T-shirt and shorts and using a cane. "He had a slight limp," Heath said.

Floyd asked the clerk for the newspapers, Heath said, and when she told him they were all sold out, he replied, "I'm the person who shot the kid."

John Guilfoil reported from Concord, N.H. Tracy Jan and Christine McConville of the Globe staff and Globe correspondents Danielle Capalbo and Stephanie Peter contributed to this report. Michael Levenson can be reached at [email protected].
 
Well the scum is now in the land of no parole. I hope it's real hot where he is at. Mr. Floyd not only kept further tragedy from happening, but he also saved the taxpayers a bundle. He has no need to regret what he did. He did right, and won.
 
cheygriz posted on 6/13 @ 11:47AMNo, it doesn't! And I speak from considerable experience, because I have USED pepper spray on several dozens of occassions.

And it has NEVER failed me.

It has never failed you yet. Be aware that there are many cases of Pepper Spray not stopping an attack. Take a look at the thread here and be careful.
Good luck to you and be safe,
M

PS.

I am glad you are aware that it works on most subjects.
 
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Good solid High road comments folks.

There were personal issues involved in this case on both sides. I really do not think we have heard anything close to the whole story. Just as in the cops behaving badly threads, I think we might want to reserve judgement.
 
???

"personal issues"? when I have personal issues I don't shoot someone then run them over... If the police officer had stepped outside his authority in the past, in today's climate, don't you think he would have a. lost his job, b. been charged criminally, c. been sued civilly... etc?

It may not be the whole story but.... I don't think it is ever a good thing when a life is lost unneccesarily... two lives were lost unneccesarily... but the actions of one man, who didn't want to stop for a police oficer, who didn't want to cooperate, who fired a pistol first, then after shooting the officer ran him over-precipitated the loss of both lives...
 
Personal issues explains a lot, I could very easily make a case for the cop having it in for the guy, and just pushed the man one step too far, one too many times using his authority as a cop to handle a personal grudge.

The thing is, we do not know the whole story or the history involved.
 
As an ex-cop, I mourn the loss of this officer. On the other hand, there's undoubtedly a lot to this tale yet to be told.

To those automatically praising the LEO and condemning Kenney, what if Kenney had been a 90 year old lady in Atlanta??? Conversely, if that Atlanta debacle had involved a young, healthy male resident with (gasp!!) a prior conviction on his record, the whole story would have never come out.

Cops can carry grudges, too, folks! I've seen that in action. :eek:
 
I would like to kow the extent of thier dealings in the past. I have read on other threads that there were allegations of beatings and misconduct on the slain officers part against Kenney. Why did he spray the passenger too.

Lots of questions unanswered.

I personally had the chief of police get out of his car and come around to the passenger side of it(where I was talking to him through the open passenger window in of the car while it was parked in my driveway), he placed his hand on the butt of his pistol and said that my best bet was to get back into my house. This after I asked him why the zoning laws were only enforced agaisnt me and not the neighbor who happens to be township fire marshall.

I did not curse nor threaten him, though I will admit I was upset.

I am not condoning nor excusing killing the police officer, but some people can be pushed too far. Regardless, he has paid the price for his crime.

Call me a hater, but I'll bet that there is much more to this story that we'll never know about.
 
Authorities said the double shooting was the bloody climax of a long-simmering feud between McKay [...] and Kenney [...]

McKay stopped Kenney for speeding on Route 116, a two-lane country road dotted with wooden barns in this rugged, picturesque town 80 miles north of Concord.

Neighbors said Kenney was driving home from his job at a market in nearby Littleton with a friend, identified by authorities as Caleb Macaulay, 21. Kenney told McKay to "get another officer," and then he sped off, according to Ayotte. McKay gave chase in his cruiser, caught Kenney about a mile and a half down the road, and stopped his car in front of Kenney's car, forcing Kenney to stop. McKay then sprayed Kenney with OC spray, an irritant similar to pepper spray, and backed away from the vehicle, Ayotte said.

Kenney pulled out a .45-caliber handgun and shot McKay four times. [...]


The town in question is a very small one, not some bustling metropolis infamous for high-speed chases, etc. Speeding isn't a felony nor a misdemeanor (in any state I've lived in thus far, merely a "civil" infraction). The whole incident could have been avoided at one of several points: Kenney not speeding, McKay not pursuing Kenney for a civil infraction, Kenney not leaving the scene (instead of simply waiting there and refusing to talk/roll down the window, etc.), McKay not chasing after Kenney (small town, known agent, remember?), McKay not hosing down Kenney with pepper spray, Kenney not blowing his top and using lethal force...

Was Kenney innocent? No.

Was McKay innocent? Sure doesn't look like it.

Too bad things ended in deaths.
 
I hope this doesn't bug this Floyd fella too much, he did the right thing.

Sorry that the fella felt like he had to shoot a cop, sorry that the cop got shot.

What's wrong with people? So a cop may be strict and a bit mean by pepper spraying you, but do you have to shoot? Then run him over? Come on, that's pretty cold.
 
The Boston Globe has some more info on this pair's past history, and it makes it sound like Floyd was lucky to NOT be charged;

http://www.boston.com/news/local/new_hampshire/articles/2007/05/13/feud_turned_deadly_in_nh/

Home > News > Local > N.H.

Feud turned deadly in N.H.
Passerby guns down police officer's killer
By Michael Levenson and John M Guilfoil, Globe Correspondent | May 13, 2007

FRANCONIA, N.H. -- New Hampshire authorities said yesterday that they will not press charges against a former Marine who stepped into a deadly shooting and killed a 24-year-old high school dropout who had moments earlier fatally shot a police officer.

The former Marine, Gregory W. Floyd, 49, was driving with his son along Route 116 in Franconia on Friday night when he saw Liko Kenney, 24, shoot Franconia Police Corporal Bruce McKay, 48, four times in the torso. After Kenney drove his Toyota Celica over McKay as the officer lay on the ground, Floyd grabbed the officer's service weapon and shot and killed Kenney.

Authorities said the double shooting was the bloody climax of a long-simmering feud between McKay, a 12-year-veteran of the three-member department, and Kenney, a cousin of World Cup champion skier Bode Miller.

In 2003, Kenney was convicted of assaulting McKay, authorities said. Kenney had contended that McKay had assaulted him, breaking his jaw and leaving him in a coma, according to Bode Miller's father, Woody.

"It was a bad mixture waiting to happen," said Connie McKenzie , a nurse who said she had tried to ad minister CPR to McKay on the lawn in front of her 18th-century farmhouse on Route 116. "They hated each other."

New Hampshire's attorney general, Kelly A. Ayotte, said Floyd will not face charges because he was justified in using deadly force.

"Based on the results of the investigation, our conclusion is that Gregory Floyd's actions were justified based upon dangerous circumstances confronted with and efforts to assist McKay," Ayotte said at a news conference in Concord.

Captain Russell Conte of the New Hampshire State Police condemned the slaying of McKay, a New York native who had a 9-year-old daughter, Courtney, and in June was to marry his fiancée, who has a 14-year-old daughter, Kylea.

"Something this egregious affects everyone in law enforcement, and it is the ultimate act of defiance for someone to shoot a police officer when he's doing his duties," Conte said.

The attack unfolded Friday at about 6:30 p.m. after McKay stopped Kenney for speeding on Route 116, a two-lane country road dotted with wooden barns in this rugged, picturesque town 80 miles north of Concord.

Neighbors said Kenney was driving home from his job at a market in nearby Littleton with a friend, identified by authorities as Caleb Macaulay, 21. Kenney told McKay to "get another officer," and then he sped off, according to Ayotte. McKay gave chase in his cruiser, caught Kenney about a mile and a half down the road, and stopped his car in front of Kenney's car, forcing Kenney to stop. McKay then sprayed Kenney with OC spray, an irritant similar to pepper spray, and backed away from the vehicle, Ayotte said.

Kenney pulled out a .45-caliber handgun and shot McKay four times. As McKay stumbled across the road, bleeding, Kenney ran his vehicle over the dying officer, Ayotte said.
Floyd, who had been driving by in a Chevrolet Tahoe with his son, also named Gregory P. Floyd, saw the entire scene, Ayotte said. A video camera in McKay's cruiser also recorded the shooting, Ayotte said.

The elder Floyd drove his Tahoe into a spot between McKay and Kenney as a shield and told his son, who is in his late teens, to run to the officer's cruiser and radio for help.

The elder Floyd picked up McKay's gun from the ground and ordered Kenney to drop his weapon. Kenney refused, and Floyd saw Kenney appear to be reloading, Conte said. Floyd then shot and killed Kenney, Conte said.

The slayings brought to light a deep history of tensions between members of the Kenney family and McKay. In 2003, Kenney had challenged the assault charge, alleging that McKay had assaulted him and broken his jaw, Woody Miller said. But Kenney lost the case -- officials yesterday were unable to say what his punishment was -- because there were no witnesses to corroborate his account, Woody Miller said.

After the case, police had agreed that if McKay ever stopped Kenney, Kenney could request that another officer come to the scene, Woody Miller said. Bode Miller had also had confrontations with McKay, and had gone to court in 2005 after McKay ticketed him for driving 83 miles per hour in a 40- mile-per-hour zone. Bode Miller told Sports Illustrated at the time that he wanted "to try to get my fine reduced and to antagonize McKay."

The shootings reverberated throughout Franconia yesterday, where the American flag outside the white clapboard Town Hall was lowered to half-staff.

Kenney lived alone in a cabin built by his father in the woodlands off Route 116, just over the border in neighboring Easton. He raised chickens and turkeys and liked to ride his all-terrain vehicle, said his uncle, Bill Kenney.

The uncle said Kenney " had a rough life, a tough background, but it seemed like he was in the process of changing these past few weeks."

"I don't know what triggered that, but basically he's the type of guy that's an independent-minded fella. He doesn't buy people telling him what to do, maybe a little stubborn," Bill Kenney said yesterday . "He's basically a good-hearted kid. He'd had some trouble in his past and his upbringing as so many young people do, and he's a Kenney, and it's a family thing. We've been around here for hundreds of years basically . . . he's as native as you can get."

At Town Hall, about 20 residents gathered yesterday afternoon to mourn the death of McKay.

"He was just a nice guy," said Sally Small, the town administrative assistant. "Obviously he and Liko Kenney had issues, but there were just as many people who thought he was very professional. He was usually the officer who would prosecute cases at the court. He did his job."

Robert Thibault, town clerk in Easton and a former selectman, said he knows Floyd because Floyd had stopped into the town offices to have his truck registered. "He seems like a nice guy," said Thibault. "I'm glad somebody did something to try to stop Liko. It was a pretty brave thing to do. Unfortunately it was too late."

Steven Heath, owner of Franconia Village Store on Main Street, said Floyd walked into his shop yesterday at about 1:30 p.m., looking for copies of local newspapers.

Floyd was dressed in a T-shirt and shorts and using a cane. "He had a slight limp," Heath said.

Floyd asked the clerk for the newspapers, Heath said, and when she told him they were all sold out, he replied, "I'm the person who shot the kid."
 
The whole situation is wonky.

It is horrible that people died, but there was definately something going on between McKay and Kenney that led to this.

McKay did ask for another officer and had his jaw broken by Kenney before, plus he lost his suit against the officer because it came down to he said/he said debate.

I can see why this could have been the 'pushed to far' incident.
 
"The officer got out of his cruiser, walked up to the driver side of Kenney's car and pepper-sprayed both Kenney and Macauley."

Is that SOP?
 
you got a cop shot 4 times and run over and video of it. the kid was described by his own family in less than the usual "he was a good boy" terms. and yet the usual suspects wanna defend him?! sad stuff.
muzt be nice to live in a world where you can pick what cop writes you up when you speed. different world than the one i live in
 
Sorry cassandrasdaddy

The local PD had already recognized that there was a lot of bad blood between the two, thats was why they gave him the right to get another officer if he was pulled over. The alternative was recognizing that an officer was possibly abusing his authority which would require more administrative action.

Based on the press release, the first thing the officer did when he pulled over the vehicle was to OC spray the occupants. Normal procedure?

This was not IMHO a cop behaving badly nor the case of a man arbitrarily killing a boy in blue. There was a personal feud going on between the two, there was a lot of history between them.
 
Real tough one for the media to deal with. Ignor or distort the story as they normally do or make him a hero as he didn't use an evil personal gun but the LEOs gun? The state should give the man a medal of some sort, but save a cat in a tree, get a medal, kill a cop killer, and either get ignored (at best) or charges against you. You can bet the working cops will thank him, but may not be allowed to do so in public. Some years ago, a CCW shot the tires out of some fleeing bank robbers in NH I recall, and that was ignored by the media also I recall.
 
muzt be nice to live in a world where you can pick what cop writes you up when you speed. different world than the one i live in

Pretty much anyone can do this - ask for the Sergeant or supervisor.

(Not sure what the exact phrase is if the supe pulls you over in the first place. ;D
 
"Based on the press release, the first thing the officer did when he pulled over the vehicle was to OC spray the occupants. Normal procedure? "

normal when you drive off after being pulled over.



my read was this kid was one of those folks that go through life withan atttitude. his own family alludes to it. hard world for guys like that when they aren't a cute kid anymore and face accountability



and if you ask for a supervisor do you then get to drive away without waiting for one? vid tape will be interesting
 
Cassandrassdaddy

Sorry, but if I am ever OC sprayed by a policeman without me resisting after I have pulled over, my first reaction would quite likely be to shoot also.

Cops do not have free reign to act as thugs, nor do many of them act as thugs. The cop in question broke the guys jaw once, and in court, the only reason the cop got off was because he was a cop. I would be willing to bet this policeman had been warned not to involve himself with this guy by his superiors and disregarded it. Small town rules are different than the big cities.

There is a lot to this story we are not hearing.
 
different worlds

if i drove away after being stopped for speeding i'd expect something along the lines of oc. not sure where you lic\ve but fleeing has always been bad in my world. some might call it resisting. and in the world of new hampshire was this young lad legal? after an assault on a cop might lil johny have been worried about the gun he was about to get caught with? autopsy might be revealing. i'm finding too lil noise dfrom boys kin. i've found that happens when folks "knew something bad was gonna happen." seen it too often
 
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