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tugboatwa
http://www.news-miner.com/Stories/0,1413,1...2931284,00.html
QUOTE
Charges reduced against man in shooting

By MARMIAN L. GRIMES and MARGARET FRIEDENAUER, Staff Writers

State prosecutors on Monday reduced charges against the 28-year-old Tanana man accused of shooting his friend at a camp on the Yukon River early Saturday morning.

Carl Erhart faces a single count of manslaughter in connection with the death of 18-year-old Lawrence Kennedy. Erhart was originally arrested on second-degree murder charges on Saturday.

Charging documents released Monday give the following account of the events leading up to Kennedy's death:

Kennedy, Erhart and another man, Christopher Grant, went to Erhart's father's cabin to cut brush on Friday. When they arrived, they each did a line of cocaine and drank alcohol. They set to work cutting brush and after they finished, went back inside the cabin and snorted more cocaine and continued drinking.

The three men were sitting around a table talking about bears and Bigfoot and Kennedy was holding a .457-caliber rifle. Erhart told Kennedy that he shouldn't handle the rifle and Kennedy gave the rifle to Erhart. Later, Erhart picked up the rifle and headed to the bedroom.

"Lawrence asked Carl what he would do if a bear or Bigfoot showed up," documents state. "At this point Carl turned around with the rifle in his hand in an overhand motion and said, 'This is what I would do,' and pointed the rifle toward the window. Carl stated in essence that when the rifle barrel came down, the rifle discharged."

The account continues: "Kennedy stood up and went to the door of the cabin saying something to the effect of 'I think you shot me.' Erhart and Grant tried to attend to his wounds, carried him to the boat and began heading back to Tanana. Rough waters forced them to shore about two miles upriver of Tanana. Grant ran to Tanana for help while Erhart stayed with Kennedy and tried to keep him warm."

Court documents state that Kennedy appeared to have been shot in the chest and died.

Erhart had his first court appearance on Monday afternoon.

More than three dozen somber people filed into a Fairbanks courtroom, filling most of the five rows of seats as they awaited Erhart's appearance via video from Fairbanks Correctional Center.

When he did, his face was clenched in a pained grimace and his eyes remained lowered during the entire short proceeding. He didn't enter a plea to the crime, as felony defendants generally enter pleas only after a grand jury indicts them on charges. He is, however, scheduled to have a bail hearing today.

"He is interested in attending the proceedings in Tanana upon Mr. Kennedy's return," said defense attorney Ken Covell. "This is clearly a tragic event ... It appears to be an accidental event."

Magistrate Ron Smith spoke briefly to Erhart during the afternoon hearing, advising him to put away guns when alcohol or drugs are being used.

Accidents happen, Smith said, "If you are using drugs and handling guns, they are likely to occur."

Smith's comments echoed those of the stunned village.

Community leaders in Tanana on Monday said the incident has drawn residents together and that leaders hope the cooperation will continue as they try to address what they say is a prevalent alcohol problem.

The Rev. Ginny Doctor is an Episcopal minister who regularly travels to Tanana and was there when the incident occurred this weekend.

"I'm very proud of the community," Doctor said. "They have really rallied together. And I'm hopeful that this indicates there will be change."

She said the community of 600, about 130 miles from Fairbanks, supported both the Kennedy and Erhart families, because they consider both people victims of the tragedy.

"They're not angry with him," Doctor said of Erhart. "They understand that these kind of things happen when people are abusing alcohol."

Doctor has been ministering in Tanana for more than 10 years and has seen the effects alcohol can have on small communities.

"I've been in and out of there since 1993 and I don't know how many people I've helped bury because of alcohol abuse," she said. "It's just nasty, nasty stuff. If I could stop it, I would."

Lester Erhart, Carl's father and a member of the city and tribal councils, asked Monday that the city-run liquor store be closed. He said the city can decide to close the doors without a council vote and expects the city may do so on his request. He said as tribal judge, he sees how alcohol abuse affects the community.

"It causes a lot of problems, I can tell you that," he said.

City council member Pat Moore said alcohol isn't the only problem in the small community. He is also concerned with illicit drug use in the village, an even harder problem than alcohol to confront he said.

"Just dealing with alcohol is the easiest thing to deal with," he said of Erhart's request to shut the liquor store. "There's no quick easy fix to shut down the drug dealers."

Reporter Marmian Grimes can be reached at 459-7504 or mgrimes@newsminer.com . Margaret Friedenauer is at 459-7525 or mfriedenauer@newsminer.com .
bigstinkyfoot
That cocaine is bad stuff.
BSF
StacyInMI
:doh:

Idiot. Drunk and unintentional, but like the title says... don't mix!
shaman
whats wierd is he just got through telling th guy he killed not to play with the gun and took it from him.
bigstinkyfoot
Don't mix drugs or alcohol with firearms, AND don't point a gun (loaded or otherwise) at anything or anyone that you do not intend blasting a hole through. I learned that at a very early age. Really just seems like common sense to me, though.
BSF
MrXray
Here ya go, Just another way to earn another: "Darwin Award"... :rolleyes:
Paul1968UK
QUOTE
Man charged in death of drinking pal
MANSLAUGHTER: Carl Erhart could face 5-year sentence if convicted.

By SHEILA TOOMEY
Anchorage Daily News

Published: June 22nd, 2005
Last Modified: June 22nd, 2005 at 05:24 AM


A Tanana man accused of shooting a friend to death over the weekend at a fish camp 30 miles from the small Yukon River village has been charged with manslaughter.


Alaska State Troopers arrested Carl Erhart, 28, Sunday on a warrant for second-degree murder in the death of Lawrence Kennedy, 18. But when the Fairbanks District Attorney's office reviewed the case Monday, it concluded the proper charge was manslaughter, said Mark Morones, a spokesman for the Department of Law.

The charging document, filed Monday in court in Fairbanks, says Erhart behaved recklessly with a gun after drinking alcohol and using cocaine.

Reached by phone at his home in Tanana on Tuesday evening, Lester Erhart, Carl's father, said he was very happy the original murder charge was reduced. Erhart said he doesn't think his son should be charged with any crime.

"It was pretty much an accident," he said.

According to the charges, Carl Erhart, Kennedy, and Christopher Grant were cleaning up the Erhart family fish camp, getting it ready for the coming season. "Upon their arrival, the three did a line each of cocaine and drank alcohol," the charging document says.

Later, inside the cabin after they finished clearing brush, the men were "talking about bears and Bigfoot," and handling a .45/70-caliber rifle. At one point, Lawrence asked Carl what he would do if a bear or Bigfoot showed up. Apparently kidding around, Carl swung the rifle toward a window, saying "This is what I would do." At some point in his movement, the gun discharged, the document says.

Lawrence ran to the cabin door, saying "words to the effect, 'I think you shot me,' " the document says.

The two uninjured men loaded Kennedy in their boat and pushed for home, but bad weather and turbulence on the river forced them back to shore. Grant ran for the village while Carl Erhart stayed with the dying Kennedy.

The normal sentence for manslaughter is five years.

"That's pretty devastating," Lester Erhart said. His son runs the village water system, which includes the laundromat and community showers. "I don't know if anybody else is qualified to do it," he said.

Tanana has a sad history of alcohol-related violence and death. The community operates a liquor store. Erhart, who is on both the city and tribal councils, was hoping the latest tragedy would lead to closing it down.

"We tried to have a city council meeting here today and nobody showed up," he said. "I guess that pretty much means they want to keep it open."

Carl Erhart remains jailed in Fairbanks.


Daily News editor Sheila Toomey can be reached at stoomey@adn.com.


http://www.adn.com/news/alaska/story/6633931p-6519992c.html
GrandCherokee
Wonder why they had a gun, with rounds in it, laying around the cabin?? Seems as though that were a natural state for the weapon to be in.
BluffCreek35
I know alot of folks who drink like a fish while deer hunting here in my neck of the woods. I stay a mountain ridge apart from those folks. Alchohol and guns deffinately don't mix. I run into those folks from time to time and the story's they tell me are crazy. They say they pile into the pick-up truck in the afternoon for the evening hunt, they drive down the road and the driver of the truck drops off the hunters along side the road every mile or so. The guy driveing is suppose to come back by at dark to pick everyone up. Well, the guy driving the truck drinks about 6 beers from the time he drops off the hunters and the time he's suppose to pick everyone up at dark. The guy is so darn drunk he has tunnel vision and he cant see all his buddys waveing on the side of the road in the headlights trying to get his attention in the dark to stop the darn truck. This guy drives back and forth for 2 hours driving right by his hunting buddies on the side of the road that he was suppose to pick up....he cant see them on the side of the road because he's so darn drunk he has tunnel vision. The hunters start throwing sticks and rocks at the truck everytime he drove by trying thier best to get his attention to stop the darn truck...eventually the noise's and bangs on the side of the truck from the rocks and sticks the hunters were throwing at it got the drunk driving fools attention and he finally stopped and picked everyone up :doh: They accually laugh about this crazy stuff like its nothing....someone could really get hurt!! Now thats not what we call hunting in my deer hunting camp.


BluffCreek35
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