Sheriff: Othal Wallace, accused of shooting Daytona officer, was ready to shoot any cop
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Sheriff: Othal Wallace, accused of shooting Daytona officer, was ready to shoot any cop
Othal Wallace, the man accused of shooting Daytona Beach Police Officer Jason Raynor Wednesday night, was likely to try to kill any law enforcement officer he encountered, said Volusia County Sheriff Mike Chitwood.
Wallace, 29, is accused of shooting Raynor in the head. Raynor is now fighting for his life at Halifax Health Medical Center.
Wallace is on the run, with hundreds of officers searching for him.
“I think this was going to happen. In my opinion any cop that stopped him was going to get it, he was going to try to kill,” Chitwood said Thursday. “This poor kid (the officer) just happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time.”
Chitwood said the officer was patrolling Kingston Avenue in response to complaints from residents.
“Doing his job because the neighbors were complaining about gun violence, drug sales and everything else, and they were stepping up patrols in the area,” Chitwood said. “He was doing what he was supposed to do.”
Daytona Beach police monitoring social media posts
At a press conference Thursday night, Daytona Beach Police Chief Jakari Young said authorities are also "monitoring" a Facebook page of someone called "O-Zone Wallace" that includes photos that appear to be Othal Wallace. The page gives the same birthdate as the suspect. Young, though, did not confirm that the page belongs to Othal Wallace.
The page indicates a connection with several groups, including the NFAC Black Militia, the New Black Panther Party, and the Huey P. Newton Gun Club Alabama Chapter. Newton was the founder of the Black Panthers.
Sheriff Chitwood said that investigators believe with “reasonable certainty” that the “O-Zone Wallace” on Facebook is the same person as Othal Wallace. He added that extremists come in all shades.
“We know that there are Black militias just like white militias. There’s no difference, extremism is extremism, black, white, brown, yellow,” Chitwood said.:laugh:
Wallace had a criminal record that included domestic battery incidents and one case in which he was accused of wielding a gun to threaten a woman.
Wallace had served time in the Volusia County jail but had not been sent to any Florida State Prison, according to online records. Until Wednesday night his troubles with the law mostly involved domestic violence accusations. In one other case, he was accused of using a gun to threaten someone.
Wallace had been ordered to attend anger management twice.
“His criminal history, while it’s lengthy, there’s really not a lot of violence there,” Chitwood said. :headbash:
Othal Wallace 'a product of' Florida juvenile justice system
:headbash: :rotfl:
Wallace had also lived for a time at the Florida United Methodist Children's Home in Enterprise. Wallace left the independent living program at the home in 2012, Mark Cobia, a spokesman for the group home, wrote in an email.
Othal Wallace's criminal record
Here are some of the cases in which Wallace has been involved in the past, according to court records:
• Daytona Beach Police were called to an apartment on S. Palmetto Avenue on Oct. 21, 2019 in response to a fight. Charnaiqua Oliver told police that she and Wallace were separated, but Wallace had been staying at the home to visit their two children. Oliver said when she arrived home Wallace asked to borrow her car and when she refused he grabbed her by the hair and neck and pulled her to the ground. She threw the keys and he let her go and walked out of the house. The children were asleep in their bedroom at the time. Oliver did not have any visible injuries. DCF was notified. Prosecutors declined to file charges against Wallace, according to a filing on Nov. 14, 2019.
• Wallace was charged with felony battery following an incident at an apartment on Woodland Boulevard in DeLand on March 31, 2018. Tyesha Lewis said Wallace, her child’s father, had punched her causing a tooth to go through her bottom lip. She said Wallace had been visiting from Miami and had left when she called DeLand police.
Lewis said Wallace had been in a bad mood all day, and when she tried to leave he threw a shoe at her and then punched her. Wallace was
• Wallace was charged with aggravated battery on Feb. 3, 2017. In that case, Wallace gave his mailing address as 51 Children’s Way in Enterprise, which is the address for the First United Methodist Children’s Home. He also gave a local address of June Court in Deltona.
That day, Volusia County deputies responded to Quail Drive in Deltona after Charnaiqua Oliver said Wallace scratched her during a disagreement while he was visiting. At the time, Oliver said she was eight months pregnant with Wallace’s child. She told Wallace to leave and not return until he had calmed down.
• Wallace was charged with aggravated battery on Feb. 3, 2017. In that case, Wallace gave his mailing address as 51 Children’s Way in Enterprise, which is the address for the First United Methodist Children’s Home. He also gave a local address of June Court in Deltona.
That day, Volusia County deputies responded to Quail Drive in Deltona after Charnaiqua Oliver said Wallace scratched her during a disagreement while he was visiting. At the time, Oliver said she was eight months pregnant with Wallace’s child. She told Wallace to leave and not return until he had calmed down.
Later that day, Wallace called Oliver and said he was coming back over to get his backpack. Oliver told him not to return and she would give him back the backpack another time. But Wallace returned and banged loudly on the windows and eventually
kicked in a door and took his backpack.
Wallace was arrested and charged with aggravated battery against a pregnant victim, a felony. He also was charged with unarmed burglary — another felony — and criminal mischief, a misdemeanor. Prosecutors declined to file charges, according to a court filing on March 8, 2017.
On June 23, 2014, Wallace was charged with felony aggravated assault with a deadly weapon by New Smyrna Beach Police.
Wallace and a co-defendant, Deon A. Washington, went to a house on Inwood Avenue in New Smyrna Beach, and demanded that Stacie Sampson tell them were a juvenile they were looking for could be found. Sampson told them she didn’t know the location of the juvenile and told them to leave. She told police Washington told her he and Wallace were always “strapped.” She said Wallace then pulled out a black pistol from the car and waved it at her in a threatening manner. He and Washington then drove away.
Wallace pleaded no contest to reduced charges of trespass, improper exhibition of a firearm and carrying a concealed weapon, all first-degree misdemeanors. Wallace was sentenced to three years probation, no contact with the victim and no weapons and anger management and drug testing, as part of the plea agreement.
Wallace violated probation in that case and was sentenced to 140 days in the county jail in May 2017. That sentence was part of a plea agreement in which he admitted violating his probation. He received credit for 63 days time served.
The violations included testing positive for marijuana, not informing his probation officer he had moved from Sanford, and being charged with unarmed burglary in the case involving Oliver in 2017.
Summary: Violent RACIST, TNB + GUNS + all the chances in the world proving niggers are subhumans.
:headbash: :rotfl: