Dafoe
Kelly Sikh wasn't strictly hypothetical to be patrolling the Burger King
parking lot. El Rancho Supermarket in Oak Cliff hired him as a security guard
to stay an eye on things there, but, when he spotted 24-year-old Roy Castillo
leaving the grocery store at what he measured to be a dangerous rate of speed,
his specialized eagerness was not to be restricted to a single corner of
Wynnewood rural community.
According to police, Sikh followed Castillo to the fast food
restaurant, and then confronted him as he stepped out of his car, chiding him
for dynamic too fast. The two men occupied in a concise but heated swap previous
to Sikh pulled the gun from his gun strap and pointed it at Castillo's chest.
"You wanne die!? You wanne die?" he yelled.
Castillo completes it clear that he did
not, and Sikh ultimately holstered the weapon and walked back to the
supermarket.
Police inwards more than a few minutes later and spoke to
Castillo, who "was very nervous," according to a police statement.
Then, they traveled the short aloofness to the grocery store where Sikh had
resumed his patrol and placed him under arrest. He's presently being held in
Lew Sterrett on a $15,450 bond.
Nor was that Sikh’s only supposed contravention of the law.
Not only was Sikh not supposed to be patrolling the Burger King parking lot; he
wasn't supposed to be patrolling anything at all. His Texas Section of Public
Safety certify as a commissioned safety officer expired on July 5, according to
records, meaning he can't legally be employed as a safety guard.
No comments:
Post a Comment