Organizers have scheduled a gathering for noon Saturday at Council Elementary School, 202 Michigan Ave. “We
want to do this protest to show that we support the Yantis family. We
want everybody to know that we all deserve to live in a safe, peaceful
environment where police are there to protect us,” said event organizer
Becca Barrow. “We are in shock that this happened in little, tiny
Council, Idaho. I would never have guessed that something like this
would happen there. It bothers a lot of us that it did.” Jack
Yantis was shot to death by two Adams County sheriff’s deputies Nov. 1
on U.S. Highway 95 in front of his ranch, about 6 miles north of
Council. Two members of Yantis’ family witnessed the shooting. They told the Statesman he was shot by two deputies for no apparent reason when he was about to shoot a bull he owned that had been hit by a Subaru station wagon. The
Adams County Sheriff’s Office has not commented publicly on the
specifics of the shooting. Idaho State Police are investigating the
incident, and the Idaho Attorney General’s Office will serve any
necessary role as prosecutor in the case...more
Jack Yantis’ wife, Donna, was standing about 20 feet away from her husband when deputies shot and killed him. Shortly after the shooting she suffered a heart attack and was transported to a Boise hospital where she remains hospitalized. In a videotaped statement made from her hospital bed, Donna Yantis, 63, gave this account of the incident:
“On
Nov. 1 at approximately 7 p.m. Adams County Sheriff’s Department called
and told us there was a bull that got hit and they wanted us on the
scene and he was mad. So we went down to check it out. I took Jack his
gun so he could put the bull out of its misery. When he walked up there
and was gonna put him down the officer came up and jerked him back
almost off his feet. I don’t know what they told him, but they just
opened fire and shot him. And then they threatened me and my nephew,
Rowdy Paradis, threw us on the middle of Highway 95, searched us and
handcuffed us and wouldn’t let us go take care of Jack.”
Issues of concern to people who live in the west: property rights, water rights, endangered species, livestock grazing, energy production, wilderness and western agriculture. Plus a few items on western history, western literature and the sport of rodeo... Frank DuBois served as the NM Secretary of Agriculture from 1988 to 2003. DuBois is a former legislative assistant to a U.S. Senator, a Deputy Assistant Secretary of Interior, and is the founder of the DuBois Rodeo Scholarship.
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