(AP)
- A deputy jailer and a convicted burglar he was supposed
to be taking to jail in Kentucky were arrested Wednesday
after going on a 90-mile drunken road trip in a
law-enforcement vehicle and making a series of false
arrests, authorities said.
The jailer and prisoner were caught after drivers began
calling authorities to report a drunken duo was making
traffic stops, State Trooper Ralph Lockard said. They
allegedly let the drivers go after accepting cash bribes.
The pair had left Knox County, in southeastern Kentucky,
on Tuesday evening and were supposed to head to Lewis
County, in the northeastern part of the state. Instead,
the cruiser and the two men were found west of Lexington,
in east-central Kentucky.
During the journey, "the inmate ended up out of
the handcuffs and in the front seat, consuming
alcohol," Knox County Judge-Executive Raymond Smith
said.
"They started stopping speeding motorists and
arresting them. They would get them in the back of the
cruiser, cut a deal for cash and let them go."
The deputy jailer, Clarence Wilson, 37, was driving a
vehicle marked similar to a police cruiser, including
emergency lights on the roof, authorities said.
Wilson, 37, has been suspended from his job pending the
outcome of an investigation, Smith said. He was charged
with drunken driving, impersonating an officer, unlawful
imprisonment and official misconduct.
The prisoner, Shawn Phillip Reynolds, 23, was charged
with alcohol intoxication. He is serving five years for
credit card fraud and burglary.
"I couldn't believe this happened," Smith
said.
"The next thing you're likely to hear is that
we're on the Jerry Springer Show. I'm humiliated."
"I'm embarrassed. I apologize to the people of
Knox County and the state."
A police officer in Mount Sterling, about 30 miles west
of Lexington, found the cruiser late Tuesday when the
jailer and the prisoner made another traffic stop, Lockard
said. They were arrested shortly after midnight.
Wilson is being held on $3,500 bail and Reynolds was
sent to the Lewis County Jail.