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Political notes from Free Press staff writers Terri Hallenbeck, Sam Hemingway and Nancy Remsen
8.26.2008
Probation hot seat
Vermont Probation & Parole is on the hot seat in the wake of the arrest of convicted sex offender Michael Jacques, whom the department recommended for release from probation at a time when he is alleged to have been abusing a teenage girl. The case ignited furor over just how loose is probation oversight. Vermont's not the only one on that hot seat. This from a lawyer in New York State: "The wife of slain New York State Trooper David Brinkerhoff, who was killed in a blazing shootout in a Catskills farmhouse in April 2007, has filed a lawsuit against St. Lawrence County, N.Y., and its probation department, alleging that their negligence and lack of protocol allowed a serial probation violator to break the terms of his supervised release and later initiate the gun battle that cost Trooper Brinkerhoff his life.
"Barbara Brinkerhoff, widow of Trooper Brinkerhoff, alleges that the man at the center of the shootout– a 23-year-old convicted thief with a history of probation violations named Travis Trim – should not have been out of jail but for a series of bungled actions by the St. Lawrence Probation Department. Defendants include the director of the department as well as the officer assigned to Mr. Trim.
"According to the complaint, Mr. Trim was first assigned a St. Lawrence County probation officer in July 2005 after an arrest for larceny. He repeatedly failed to maintain his supervised probation in the final months of 2006. Mrs. Brinkerhoff alleges that multiple lapses within the St. Lawrence County Probation Department not only allowed him to remain free, but also ensured that no New York law enforcement agencies were even aware that a warrant had been issued for his arrest.
"According to the complaint, the warrant issued by a Canton, NY village justice in December 2006 and sent to the Probation Department was – incredibly – destroyed in a shredder upon receipt.
"Four months later, Mr. Trim was stopped by a New York State Trooper on a road near Margaretville, the vehicle he was driving without a license plate turned out to be stolen. He fired at the trooper, hitting his protective vest, then took refuge in a nearby farmhouse. A swarm of state police, alerted by a silent alarm that went off at the house, surrounded it the next morning and went inside.
"Searching room to room, they found handguns and shotguns Mr. Trim had brought with him. A furious gun battle ensued, during which one state trooper, Richard Mattson, suffered a debilitating hand wound that forced him to take disability retirement. Trooper Brinkerhoff then shot and killed Mr. Trim. In almost the next instant, he was mistakenly shot from behind by a fellow trooper and died."
- Terri Hallenbeck
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