Man suspected of shooting Spokane County deputy was former bank executive with domestic violence history
But his business dealings were contentious, and Bellamy eventually lost his job as a vice president of RiverBank, which he co-founded in 2006. As his second marriage crumbled, he filed for a
Although never convicted of a violent crime, court records paint a picture of man who sank into a deep depression, heavy drinking and lashing out -- often physically -- at his wife. After one incident at his
Bellamy, 47, died Monday night after a four-hour standoff with deputies at his home at
Sheriff
The name of the injured sergeant was not released, but Knezovich said the bullet was surgically removed Tuesday morning at
"It's a story about someone who was a really hard worker and had great aspirations, and his world caved in around him," said
They worked on several projects together, including a renovation of the six-story Holley-Mason building in downtown
"He was a really good guy," Brewster said. "It's just unbelievable that he got so far away from who he really was. I know he was making a concerted effort to recover."
Financial ruin
Bellamy was a vice president of
Several years later he borrowed a large sum to buy stock in RiverBank -- an investment that plummeted in value during the recession, Brewster said. "All of a sudden he's sitting out there with a couple of million dollars in loans that he can't pay back."
Bellamy left the bank soon afterward.
"He got into some tiffs with some people on the board" of directors, said Brewster, whose father served on the board. "He either quit or was fired -- I never did find that out -- and that really started his emotional downfall."
In his December bankruptcy filings, Bellamy said the home was in foreclosure and claimed he had been wrongfully fired from a tree care and removal company where he worked for a few months in 2015, around the time of his first arrest.
Court records from 2015 say Bellamy was "despondent about the end of the marriage and a business failure" and repeatedly threatened to kill himself and others with his 10 mm pistol. His second wife moved to
Bellamy had depression, post-traumatic stress disorder and Parkinson's disease, according to court records. At one point in 2015, he was involuntarily committed for a mental health evaluation.
In the bankruptcy filings, Bellamy claimed he had made a "civil liberty case" against the
"No adequate investigation ensued," he wrote. "Health issues followed."
'Tragedy'
The pair had been friends since they met at
"I spoke to him a few weeks ago and he seemed to be struggling with stuff, but he was trying to right himself," McCarthy said.
Between court hearings and stints in jail, Bellamy had been in and out of mental health treatment, McCarthy said.
"How all of that happened, and how they weren't able to get him help, that's a mystery to me. The services failed him," McCarthy said. "The only thing I'm thinking about right now is Dean's family and how they're dealing with this tragedy."
The shooting is under investigation by the
Staff writer
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