Monday, August 4, 2008

Volunteer Firefighter With Criminal Record Arrested Again

Byron Fritz, 39, recently left his position as a volunteer firefighter in Augusta County, Virginia after two years. The reason? He was recently arrested after trying to sell law enforcement supplies to a Sheriff.

Sheriff Randy Fisher immediately became suspicious of Fritz and his business, and conducted a background check on Fritz. It revealed that in 1994, he was arrested for impersonating a police officer. In 1997, a court issued an order that he could not possess law enforcement items such as badges, patches or even white vehicles resembling those driven by law enforcement.

Shortly after the background check was completed, the sheriff's office raided Fritz's business, seizing dozens of police badges, handcuffs, stun guns, and pepper spray.

Up until the arrest and seizure occurred, Fritz was a volunteer firefighter despite his criminal record. The Augusta County Fire Department is investigating how he was allowed to become a volunteer firefighter. Chief Mike Fisher was quoted as saying, "A lot of those charges against Mr. Fritz were old charges. I mean, in 2006 when he submitted his application, the last time that was charged was over eight years ago, and any probation or anything like that would be well over by then."

We were able to pull up Fritz's prior record dating back to 1993, which included charges of failure to appear, probation violations, possession of a concealed weapon and driving on a suspended license.

Chief Myers has said that many fire departments across the country are desperate for volunteers and he understands how someone, such as Fritz, could "fall through the cracks."

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8 Comments:

At August 4, 2008 1:24 PM , Anonymous Dawn Mahoney said...

Even if the charge was awhile ago, the similiarity between the crime (impersonating law enforcement) and his application to work as an emergency responder, should raise red flags. This would be like putting a sex offender in a school, or a drug abuser in a pharmacy. A little common sense goes a long way...

 
At August 4, 2008 2:31 PM , Anonymous Howell Huser said...

So he couldn't impersonate an officer of the law anymore and decided to try out firefighting.

Is there a statute of limitations on how long a criminal record can be used to determine eligibility for something...or is that up to the people doing the hiring?

 
At August 4, 2008 2:38 PM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

How could the fire chief try to justify this guy's behavior? I think that is the scariest part of the whole thing.

 
At August 4, 2008 3:07 PM , Anonymous Jan said...

He was arrested for trying to sell law enforcement items to a sherrif?? Why did he think he would get away with THAT?!

 
At August 4, 2008 3:08 PM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

Fall through the cracks?? How could a anyone take this so lightly?!

 
At August 6, 2008 8:11 AM , Anonymous DBP said...

I totally agree with the first comment. Background checks are easy to acquire - *GOOD* checks (not instant databases!) are even better and convenient to get online - and all it takes is combining the results with a little critical thinking.

"...through the cracks."
???
Mercy, mercy me.

 
At August 6, 2008 9:13 AM , Anonymous Betty C. said...

I think that someone who would commit the crimes that Mr. Fritz has been convicted of should be monitored closer. This is a tough pill to swallow because on one hand you want to hope that after 8 years one might grow up and become responsible. In this case it shows how hard it is to trust a convicted criminal. It sure gives rehabilitated criminals another hill to climb.

 
At August 6, 2008 3:10 PM , Anonymous Al Dittman said...

Thank goodness for the Police and background checks.

 

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