Lebanon, TN Police Officer Killed by Illegal Aliens
Off Duty Police Officer Jeffery Stone was killed while riding his motorcycle, a BMW driven by illegal aliens pulled into Officer Stone’s lane and crashed into him. Officer Stone leaves a wife and three children.

Driver Jose Chavez and passenger Barrea Montes
Men Held In Jail After Motorcycle Crash Kills Police Officer





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AWwww. That is just too bad. ILLEGAL aliens here? Cops not enforcing the laws. Why? Are the rich making money off of the illegals and control the cops. And one got himself killed. Lets prosecute these gentleman to the same extreme as the officer that was drunk and killed a little girl. Or the officers caught dealing steroids within the metro department. Do you really expect an ounce of pity from me? No way. When a cop gives me a ticket for a moving violation (no wheel tax sticker in which I bought the vehicle and tag from tennessee trader) and it costs me $600.00 and 1 month of probation. Do your job and stop preying on the people you are sworn to serve and protect. Send these and all illegals back to thier own home country then maybe I would be working instead of blogging about how this government sucks. As far as the family of this police officer; sorry about your luck but he is a cop afterall. Just the hazzard of the job. As a final word, what comes around goes around.
It is very sad and so unnecessary that the story of ILLEGALS murdering Police Officers and United States Citizens has to be constantly REPEATED!. The link will display pictures of Officer Johnson and his wife who is also a HPD Officer.
This Police officers was murdered by an ILLEGAL the same as Officer Rodney Johnson of the Houston Police Department who was murdered by an ILLEGAL who was concerned about being DEPORTED AGAIN. He was aided in returning to the United States after a previous deportation by his ILLEGAL EMPLOYER.
The reason we have the problem with ILLEGALS is because of our inept government and we do not need more government incompetence to intrude on the every day Citizen’s life. The answer is to Secure Our National Borders, the source of the ILLEGALS, and Enforce Our Immigration Laws (Heavy Fines and Felony Jail Time for ILLEGAL EMPLOYERS), the draw for the ILLEGALS; these are laws already on the books that NEED to be enforced.
http://womenincrimeink.blogspot.com/2008/05/officer-rodney-johnson-hpd-badge-no.html
Sunday, May 25, 2008
Officer Rodney Johnson’s Last Call
by Connie Park
When Houston police officer Rodney Johnson received the department’s Badge Number 5913, he took the oath to protect and serve the citizens of Houston, Texas. Years later, on September 21, 2006, Officer Johnson was policing the city when he made what should have been a routine traffic stop. What happened in that brief moment changed the course of many lives–a tragic moment no one can reverse.
Officer Johnson stopped Juan Leonardo Quintero on traffic for speeding. Johnson handcuffed him and placed him in the back seat of his police cruiser. While Officer Johnson was sitting in the front driver’s seat of the vehicle filling out paperwork, he was shot not once, but four times in the back of the head by the suspect he had handcuffed. Quintero had managed to retrieve a pistol from his waistband. Though he had been shot, Officer Johnson somehow was able to press the emergency button in his patrol car. That was the last thing Johnson did before he died, the “last call� he made as a police officer.
Quintero (pictured right) was taken into custody to the HPD homicide office where he gave a videotaped confession to Sergeant David Ferguson. In his statement, Quintero said that he shot the officer because he thought that Johnson had disrespected him–that Officer Johnson should have just given him a ticket rather than taking him into custody. Quintero demonstrated in the video how he managed to retrieve the pistol and fire it while he was in handcuffs. It turned out that Quintero was illegally in the United States. He was charged with capital murder of a police officer and pled not guilty by reason of insanity. Quintero’s attorneys claimed that Quintero suffered from mental disease or defect and was unable to understand what he was doing. Quintero was facing the death penalty for the brutal murder of Officer Johnson.
On May 8, 2008, it took only six hours for Harris County jurors in Houston to come back with a guilty verdict for Quintero. Now it was up to the jurors to decide on sentencing, which, in a Texas capital murder case, consists of two options: life in prison without parole or the death penalty. During the State’s compelling closing arguments in the punishment phase, prosecutors John Jordan and Denise Bradley asked the jurors to follow and interpret the law, which, they argued, would clearly show that Quintero deserved the death penalty and that he posed a future threat or danger to society.
“You look for some humanity in this defendant,” Assistant District Attorney Jordan said, referring to the videotaped confession. “You look for some emotion, some heart, some soul in this defendant. You can watch it twenty times and you won’t find it.â€?
Prosecutor Bradley addressed Quintero directly: “You’re a threat in the back seat of a patrol car. You’re a threat anywhere. We can’t protect ourselves from Juan Quintero.”
Quintero’s attorneys stated that brain damage caused their client to suffer from mental disease and that his actions that day were a result of “freak circumstances.â€? The attorneys asked the jurors to show some mercy on Quintero.
Naturally, prosecutor Bradley countered by asking whether Quintero showed any mercy when he shot Officer Johnson four times in the back of the head.
On May 20, 2008, the jurors decided to sentence Quintero to life in prison without parole. This stunned everyone in the courtroom, including Quintero and his attorneys. Prosecutors were shocked, as were Johnson’s wife, Joslyn Johnson, his family members, friends and brothers and sisters in blue. This was a senseless act where Officer Johnson was executed and murdered. This was a case where the death penalty was the right and just punishment.
Officer Johnson was not only a coworker of mine, but I was fortunate to have been friends with him and with his wife, Sergeant Joslyn Johnson (pictured left). I remember a couple of years ago I asked him what makes a good marriage and how he and Joslyn got along so well. He told me that he was just lucky to have Joslyn as his wife. As for everyone who knew him, Rodney was a big teddy bear and a jokester.
Officer Johnson will not only be remembered as a fallen hero who gave the ultimate sacrifice. He will also be remembered as a great and respected man. During a victim’s impact statement to the court, Officer Johnson’s sister, Susan Johnson, told everyone in the courtroom that “Rodney was bigger than lifeâ€? and that he was a loving husband, father, brother, son, and brother in blue. He loved his family and his job as an officer. Rodney was proud to wear his badge and uniform and to protect and serve the City of Houston. She stated that what Quintero did on September 21, 2006, will affect their lives forever but that Quintero will never be able to take away the cherished memories they have of Rodney.
I can’t even fathom the pain Joslyn and Rodney’s children and other family members have gone through since they received the phone call and learned that Rodney had been killed. But what I can say is that we, Rodney’s brothers and sisters in blue, feel an emptiness and sadness only officers can describe. It’s what bonds officers together and what makes us a family. It’s the oath we all took to protect and to serve and Rodney was doing exactly that on the day he was shot and killed by Quintero. Rodney’s caring and selfless acts will have an unforgettable impact on our lives forever and we are all blessed to have known him.
We will continue to love and pray for Joslyn and the kids and Rodney’s family members. But, most importantly, we will never forget Rodney and he will be in our hearts forever.
We will also carry in our heavy hearts the thought of if and when our “last call� will be.
Some of us can be so insensetive to other peoples loses. I feel the same way as you. If we cant get control of the immigrants then we stand to loose more than our lives. As for Jeff Stone. He did serve in war and fought for us and not just for us here at home as a police officer. He leaves family that loves him and the same that goes for the little girl that was killed by the officer. No one is perfect, neither are the officers that make the same mistakes as we do.
Hey Toni – Take a whack at Aunt B, now blogging for the Nashville Scene with her inaugural post on how the 287g and everyone who supports it is a racist.
It would be just terrific if one of the surviving family members of any of the dozens of people killed by illegal aliens in Tennessee confronted these people in a public setting once but I’d settle for trashy, gloryhole outlets like The Scene to give them equal time in their own pages.
This goes to the poster “GG”. I have a great idea. Let’s do away with police all together. That way, when someone tries to commit a crime against you, don’t call the police, call a drug dealer or a murderer. I think that will make you feel safe at night.
I understand your frustration with having to pay a ticket, but here is the harsh reality. NO ONE LIKES IT. What about the stop the officer makes for some tag violation and the driver ends up being wanted for murder or a bank robbery? The officer would be a Hero then; no one would complain. He would be known for doing his job the way he should. Which is what happened in your case; its not his fault you didn’t have the correct items on your tags.
Being a police officer does not mean you have to expect death. Most police officers have families at home who greatly support and respect their jobs, but they want them to come home at the end of their shift. You obviously do not have any loved ones in law enforcement; if you did, you would understand the fear you have when your LEO goes out for his shift. I’m not saying that police officers are perfect, they are not. They are held to higher standards and hold a respectable position. They have gone through many hours of training and have seen many horrible things that someone who is not in LE will never and should never have to see. Suicides, homicides, child abuse, even just the smell of death, or being the first person on the scene after someone shot them self; Yes, they did sign up for it, but no amount of training can prepare you for what you will see. Then the officer goes home, and his family members have to help him through everything he’s going through. You have no idea.
Everyone is entitled to their own opinion, this is mine. Don’t judge, Stone was an officer, he also was a human, God’s creation.
It’s never easy to see anyone you know go. Just show a little respect for the Men and Women who out there having to deal with all the cruel realities of life.
For anyone else reading this, please keep Stones family and his co workers in your prayers. They need it, just as you would if you had lost a loved one.
Hey “GG”……… what happened? Didn’t get enough hugs as a child? Maybe you just haven’t gotten enough of “poor, poor, pitiful me” sympathy. You’re not any better or worse than the rest of us. So why don’t you just keep your mouth shut and your comments to yourself. No one gives a s*** about how you feel!
As for this officer’s family….my deepest sympathies for Jeffery and may he rest in peace.
From a brother in blue in Colorado