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Interview Of Greg Floyd Sr. Details Franconia (N.H.)Shootings
Caledonian Record ^ | Thursday June 28, 2007 | AMY ASH NIXON Staff Writer

Posted on 06/29/2007 5:43:38 AM PDT by Candor7

EDITOR'S NOTE: The following details the police interview of Gregory Floyd Sr., the man who shot Liko Kenney, Cpl. Bruce McKay's killer. Yesterday's paper featured police interviews with the two witnesses to the shootings, Gregory Floyd Jr. and Caleb Macaulay.

In an interview with Sgt. Charles West of the New Hampshire State Police on the night of the shootings, Gregory Floyd Sr., 49, who was the passer-by who came upon the scene, took Cpl. Bruce McKay's gun and shot and killed Liko Kenney, Floyd shares his version of the accounts of that night.

The interview begins with the trooper informing Floyd, who is an ex-Marine and a convicted felon, that he is not under arrest and that he is free to leave at any point he chooses. He signs a Miranda form and is told that his son, who witnessed the shooting of Kenney by his father, is also at the state police barracks.

"I just don't want him to get too upset," Floyd said of his son, "because you know, he's never saw no violence or nothing."

Floyd is advised of his rights and as West reads him his rights, he says, "Yah, can we just cut, cut to the chase, and I'll just initial em all because I know what they all mean."

He says he does not want a lawyer. "I don't think I've done anything wrong."

West says, "I don't want to rush through this, you understand what's going on here?"

"Yah, yah, I understand," Floyd says.

A few minutes into the interview - which is 80 pages in length - Floyd says to West, "I don't think you guys are gonna charge me with, with murder or, or anything like that, because bas-, basically, uh, I was defending someone that was helpless."

"OK, well let me start from this point here," West says to him. "I, I have a general idea of what happened. Why don't you in your own words um start, tell me the story what, what had happened?"

Floyd says he and his son, who is 18, had headed from their home on Hummingbird Lane in Easton to Mac's that Friday evening to buy some groceries.

West asks Floyd if it was still light out, and he responds, "It was pretty light until there was 150 troopers there."

Floyd says his son and he bought their groceries at Macs and were headed home, with his son driving, when they saw a police car and another vehicle, "bumper to ass, guess would be the best way to put it."

The pair spotted the two cars on Route 116. "It's not like a normal stop, where you see a car pulled over and a cruiser behind it kicked off a little," Floyd says. He says McKay's police SUV was "pushing the guy up against the bulldozer, uh you know, with his car."

Floyd is asked to draw a map of what he saw. He said he was curious about the position of the cars, and how the police cruiser had Kenney's car pushed up against a bulldozer so it couldn't move. He said he was looking at the scene when he heard a gunshot.

"I knew that it had come from over, you know by the police and all because he came running by, holding his side like this and blood was uh, you know, coming out in spasms.

"There were two guys talking there and they said he's a local policeman and him and this guy have some kind of grievance or ..." Floyd says. "Something's going on."

Floyd continues, "I was sitting right, right there the whole time because they were in the middle of the road, not on either side like I told you, they were in the middle ..."

"So (McKay) runs across the road, the oh, the policeman does," Floyd says. "And they come behind him in a car and run him over, OK, and they back up and you know hit him again and the gun comes flying out the window, now I believe that that gun was still the perpetrator's, I'm not positive."

Floyd goes on, "I picked it up and I leaned, leaned in to see what this guy was doing and you know, pressed my elbow into the passenger's throat to hold him in place and the other guy was trying to jack around then you know into the tenth millimeter ..."

He said he had seen the gun he picked up in Kenney's hand. Floyd said before he approached the car, the Kenney car had run McKay over a second time. "I said uh-huh, there's a chance to, to save somebody."

Floyd said he got out of his car and told his son to run to McKay's cruiser and say "dispatch" and tell them that the officer needed help, and the location.

Floyd said he checked to make sure the gun he found was loaded and ready to shoot and said he saw Kenney "trying with both hands to unjam his gun, uh, be- because, um, for some reason, uh, he'd get one bullet in the chamber but the second bullet behind it wouldn't let the slide shut but anyway while he was doing that, I just, I just shot him because ...."

Trooper West presses Floyd to determine if Floyd believed Kenney was attempting to reload to shoot him, and he said he did. "I wasn't gonna let him get, get that gun loaded, either," he says. He said he had pointed the gun at Caleb Macaulay's face to warn him not to mess with him during the scuffle. "I point the gun at his face and tell him to get out of the car and get on his knees and if he moves I'm gonna blow his, blow his face off."

Floyd said he then made sure he was in possession of both guns. He said he wasn't sure if he had shot Kenney once or twice, but said he could have put two bullets in Kenney's heart. "But I mean I, I wasn't thinking of killing nobody but, uh, I'm not going to sit there and watch an innocent man being run over time and again, time and again .... In my mind (Kenney) was trying to kill him," he said of what he witnessed happening to McKay.

As West continues to obtain information about Floyd's eyewitness account, he asks him if he heard either Kenney or Macaulay say anything. "I heard the passenger say, ‘I can't believe this, I can't believe this,' and you know, at that point, you know, I'm ordering him out, it's just too many damned guns around."

The officer asks Floyd if he knew either the police officer or the two young men in the car, and he says he did not know any of them. Floyd is asked about a comment he had made earlier about having witnessed shootings before. He said he was in the Marine Corps during Vietnam.

"I worked for the government in places and things you can't talk about," he says.

He is asked if he has a criminal record and says he does - for marijuana charges in Georgia that led to a felony conviction. "I made a mistake, plain and simple," he tells the officer.

At this point, West points out to Floyd that he has blood on his arm and asks him how it got there. "I took my shirt off and tried to uh make a tourniquet for the officer when he was trapped under the vehicle," he says. The interview was being taped the same night as the shootings, May 11.

There was one discrepancy in the way Floyd described one of the vehicles, and he points out that that could have occurred when about a half-dozen men moved the car "off the policeman" to try and save him.

Floyd expresses some concern about having shared his story at this point. "I'm worried because you know I know I'm a felon and I've taken a risk but I'm not gonna allow a man to be killed by being you know run over four or five times, I just, I'm just not made that way."

He is asked about the medications he takes and if he consumed any alcohol that day, to which he responds, "No, I don't drink."

As trooper West continues to question Floyd, he asks him how Kenney knew he was there. Floyd responds, "I was telling the driver to stop and he looked up once .... You know and I'm screaming either put it down or, or you're gonna die ... I'm saying put it down, leave it alone, you know you want to live, whatever, whatever come into my mind that I thought he might let it go ... and I wouldn't have to shoot him but ...."

"Now did he respond at all?" West asks.

"No he looked up at me one time but he kept jacking you know and ... as far as I, I'm concerned he was clearly a threat and had no remorse about running that police officer over with his car and you know trying to do it again, you know so why should I give him a chance, if he might shoot me, you know and I ..."

"Did you, did you feel threatened by him?" West asks Floyd.

"Oh yah, till I got that gun away," Floyd responds.

West then references an incident at Floyd's home in 1997, when a scuffle with a meter reader led to state police coming to Floyd's home, where he threatened three state police and was arrested for being a felon in possession of firearms. The case ended up being dismissed in court later, court records show.

West was one of the three state troopers who Floyd had threatened to give a third eye. West asks Floyd in the interview the night of the Kenney and McKay shootings about his use of firearms since that arrest, and he said he did some shooting on Prince Edward Island within the past year, and his wife owns a gun, but he does not.

Floyd, in the interview, refers to Macaulay and Kenney as "the bad guys," and "the bandits," several times.

A number of other witnesses' testimony and officer testimony also is part of the reports released this week.

According to the state Chief's Medical Examiner's Office, McKay died from five gunshot wounds. He also had numerous other injuries from being run over, including lacerations, broken bones, a fractured skull and more. His cause of death was ruled a homicide.

Kenney, the Chief Medical Examiner's Office ruled, died of two gunshot wounds, the manner of his death was also homicide. Toxicology results for Kenney revealed marijuana consumption, the autopsy showed. Have the Daily Headlines emailed to you within minutes of being posted.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Related Stories:

Interviews With Witnesses To Franconia Shootings Made Public June 27, 2007 Police cruiser video shows last moments before officer's death June 26, 2007 Cruiser Video Shows 2003 Confrontation Between Kenney And McKay June 22, 2007 Community Forms Group To Assist In Recovery May 30, 2007 Hundreds Mourn Liko Kenney May 21, 2007 Police Officer Bruce McKay Laid To Rest May 18, 2007 Hundreds Attend Wake For Officer May 17, 2007 Law Enforcement Officers Begin Arriving For Funeral May 16, 2007 Police Officer And Gunman Had A Stormy History May 15, 2007 Passer-By Killed Man To Protect Fallen Officer May 14, 2007 Franconia Police Officer And Citizen Fatally Shot May 12, 2007

In Franconia Shootings, Liko's Uncle Talks To Police June 28, 2007 In McKay Shooting, New documents give clue to passer-by's role June 26, 2007 Franconia Recovery Committee Conducting Survey On Tragedy June 23, 2007 Conflicting Images Emerge From Double Shooting May 14, 2007


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Extended News; US: New Hampshire; US: Vermont
KEYWORDS: armedcitizen; bang; banglist; selfdefence
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This ex-Marine deserves a medal. But the liberal socialist freeks , who support Leto Kenny, (the dead perp.)of Coos County, New Hampshire, are still crying "foul." Greg Floyd is a fine man, and should be thanked officially by the State of New Hampshire.
1 posted on 06/29/2007 5:43:40 AM PDT by Candor7
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To: DaveLoneRanger

Armed Citizen PING!


2 posted on 06/29/2007 5:47:43 AM PDT by Candor7 (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Baghdad_(1258))
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To: Candor7

I think Floyd did the right thing based on what he was seeing at the moment.

As for the trooper, I think he could have kept it from getting out of hand and resulting in his death if he had called, and waited for, assitance instead of going after Kenney himself. It’s not like he didn’t know who the guy was and where he could be found.


3 posted on 06/29/2007 6:01:51 AM PDT by Anonymous Rex ( For Rent)
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To: Candor7
" Floyd is asked about a comment he had made earlier about having witnessed shootings before. He said he was in the Marine Corps during Vietnam."

Floyd being the age of 49 is not old enough to be a Vietnam Vet.

4 posted on 06/29/2007 6:01:54 AM PDT by Deaf Smith
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To: Candor7
But the liberal socialist freeks , who support Leto Kenny, (the dead perp.)of Coos County, New Hampshire, are still crying "foul."

I saw a pic of the 'shrine' the local commies erected for Kenny... it made me want to vomit!

5 posted on 06/29/2007 6:07:43 AM PDT by johnny7 ("But that one on the far left... he had crazy eyes")
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To: Deaf Smith
I am puzzled by this as you must be. He also mentions working with some sort of SOG group, which might have been in Cambodia or in Laos. Its a mystery that is awaiting more news. 2007 minus 49 would make him born in 1958.Adding 18 years puts him into 1976, 3 years after the end of the war in 1973.

Was he on SOG OPS? Well , this is something that needs to be asked of him, and I intend to do so.

Thanks for pointing this out.

6 posted on 06/29/2007 6:11:12 AM PDT by Candor7 (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Baghdad_(1258))
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To: Anonymous Rex
As for the trooper, I think he could have kept it from getting out of hand and resulting in his death if he had called, and waited for, assitance instead of going after Kenney himself. It’s not like he didn’t know who the guy was and where he could be found.

That's true, this was an avoidable tradgedy.

Waiting for assistance would most likely resulted in saving the lives of both Kenny and the Trooper.

Being that McKay and Kenny had a history of bad blood between them is further reason to avoid the situation.

My heart goes out to all the families involved.
7 posted on 06/29/2007 6:15:50 AM PDT by HEY4QDEMS (Sarchasm: The gulf between the author of sarcastic wit and the person who doesn't get it.)
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To: Candor7

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1858229/posts


8 posted on 06/29/2007 6:18:46 AM PDT by Deaf Smith
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To: Deaf Smith

I’m sorry to have to say it, but you should never talk about this kind of thing with out a lawyer. You never know when you might be made an example of by some zealous DA. If you are forced to defend yourself, do not waize your rights. It also pays to think ahead and know a lawyer who is well versed in self defense.


9 posted on 06/29/2007 6:29:33 AM PDT by scout34 (scout34)
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To: Anonymous Rex
As for the trooper, I think he could have kept it from getting out of hand and resulting in his death if he had called, and waited for, assitance instead of going after Kenney himself. It’s not like he didn’t know who the guy was and where he could be found.

This was posted the other day along with the video, it was taken down. The cop/trooper had to be one of the dumbest cops I ever saw. But he didn't deserve to get shoot and he probably wouldn't have if he had followed the law.

10 posted on 06/29/2007 6:44:36 AM PDT by org.whodat (What's the difference between a Democrat and a republican????)
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To: scout34

“It is best to remain silent and thought a fool, than to open your mouth and remove all doubt.”


11 posted on 06/29/2007 6:57:53 AM PDT by Deaf Smith
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To: org.whodat
Another thing weird about McKay's behavior is that only a few weeks prior, he had issued a memo to the other troopers in the department that Kenny possessed a .45 cal handgun and that he had little respect authority. The memo advised that officers should be aware of potential confrontations when dealing with Kenny and that caution should be used.

You would think that after all that, the last thing McKay would do is turn his back on Kenny after pepper spraying him.

Couple that with the fact that the two of them had personal contempt for each other and it just makes matters worse.
12 posted on 06/29/2007 7:00:03 AM PDT by HEY4QDEMS (Sarchasm: The gulf between the author of sarcastic wit and the person who doesn't get it.)
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To: Candor7
Actually the war ended in March 1975.

That’s when South Vietnam fell....

I joined the Army in January 1975 which technically makes me a Vietnam Era Veteran - but I don’t compare myself in any way to those who served in Vietnam.

My first permanent party duty station was with 1/9 Cav, 1st Cav, Ft. Hood Texas. They were the last unit out.... many of the guys I worked with had served in Vietnam.

So, if he had joined the Marines when he was 17 it would be possible he had served in Vietnam.

13 posted on 06/29/2007 7:14:24 AM PDT by NorthernTraveler
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To: Candor7; Deaf Smith

We withdrew from Vietnam in May, 1975, IIRC. I enlisted in October, 1973, at age 18, and I’m about 3 years older than Mr. Floyd. Also depends on what month he was born, and if he was a minority enlistee. My brother enlisted in the Navy at age 17, late in 1974.


14 posted on 06/29/2007 7:33:16 AM PDT by Old Student (We have a name for the people who think indiscriminate killing is fine. They're called "The Bad Guys)
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To: Candor7
He says he does not want a lawyer. "I don't think I've done anything wrong."

Just because you don't think you've done anything wrong doesn't mean they won't try to nail your hide to the wall. Just ask a Duke lacrosse player. Nobody should ever talk to the police unless they have their lawyer present.

15 posted on 06/29/2007 7:38:58 AM PDT by mvpel (Michael Pelletier)
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To: NorthernTraveler; Candor7; Deaf Smith
Wikipedia says the war ended 30 April 1975, with the fall of Saigon. I distinctly remember the evacuation of the US Embassy being in May, but maybe I’m having a senior moment here...
16 posted on 06/29/2007 7:39:02 AM PDT by Old Student (We have a name for the people who think indiscriminate killing is fine. They're called "The Bad Guys)
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To: Candor7

Floyd actually did break a law - he was a felon in possession of a firearm, and if the prosecutor was an a—hole, he could charge Floyd for it and make him mount an affirmative defense.


17 posted on 06/29/2007 9:28:42 AM PDT by mvpel (Michael Pelletier)
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To: mvpel

Good luck getting ANY jury in the state of New Hampshire that would ever convict him. The going sentiment is that while McKay was a pretty heavy-handed guy when it came to dealing with the younger people in town, he didn’t deserve what Liko Kenney did and Floyd saved the NH taxpayer a BIG bill.


18 posted on 06/29/2007 9:36:29 AM PDT by OCCASparky (Steely-Eyed Killer of the Deep)
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To: mvpel
and if the prosecutor was an a—hole, he could charge Floyd for it

Unfortunately that is true.

Let's hope that common sense prevails.
19 posted on 06/29/2007 9:53:04 AM PDT by HEY4QDEMS (Sarchasm: The gulf between the author of sarcastic wit and the person who doesn't get it.)
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To: HEY4QDEMS
You would think that after all that, the last thing McKay would do is turn his back on Kenny after pepper spraying him.

Couple that with the fact that the two of them had personal contempt for each other and it just makes matters worse.

That is true, when you watch the video all you see is an out of control cop walk and start pepper spraying the guy without a word, then to turn your back and walk off is just asking for some fool to put a bullet in you. I think this was as much as personal vendetta as anything.

20 posted on 06/29/2007 10:17:29 AM PDT by org.whodat (What's the difference between a Democrat and a republican????)
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