Stewart’s family heartbroken over shooting [Standard-Examiner, Ogden, Utah]
| By Charles F. Trentelman, Standard-Examiner, Ogden, Utah | |
| McClatchy-Tribune Information Services |
He's also angry.
"Why couldn't they have done a little homework?" he said of the police.
"If they had, they'd have known he'd be out at 11 o'clock (in the evening)," leaving the house to go to work. He said his son would have been easy to arrest then.
Instead, earlier that evening, the Weber-Morgan Narcotics Strike Force served a warrant at his son's home at
Six officers and Stewart's son, Matthew, were shot in the ensuing confrontation.
One of those officers has since died.
He and his son have been estranged for a year and a half, he said, so he doesn't know what his son was doing that would draw the attention of police.
He stressed repeatedly that his heart goes out to the families of the officers involved, especially the family
"I just want it to be known, our hearts go out to all those officers and their families," he said.
"Quote me that I think it needs to be our priority with the officers that are still suffering. We're just devastated by this whole thing. What else can I say?"
Stewart said his son is a veteran of the
However, records obtained from the
He was stationed at
According to the
"I talked to one of my sons, and in the
"He should have gone to get help, but in his eyes, it showed you were weak, and he tried to do it himself," growing marijuana occasionally to self-medicate.
He insisted his son didn't sell drugs and bristled at news reports that he said portrayed his son's home as being in a bad neighborhood.
"We helped him buy that house. It's a great little neighborhood."
Stewart said shooting in a situation where a group of armed men break into a house isn't all that surprising. In his job, he has to serve court papers, and he said he always tries to be careful, because he never knows how people will react.
He has to appear in court next week because someone assaulted him, he said, and that was just on a civil matter.
"Hey, figure it out. If 12 people come through your door, what are you going to do?"
If his son was sleeping, he said, he could easily react by defending himself, especially considering his military and security training.
"My whole thing is, it was an overreaction on both of their parts, and both families are suffering."
Matthew Stewart's only criminal conviction was in 2005 in
Standard-Examiner reporter
___
(c)2012 the Standard-Examiner (Ogden, Utah)
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