Search continues in Maine as officer is charged with lying about taking missing person to hospital

Authored by abcnews.go.com and submitted by prailock

Police in Maine say an officer accused of lying about a missing-person case has been charged with several crimes

Search continues in Maine as officer is charged with lying about taking missing person to hospital

WASHBURN, Maine -- A Maine police officer accused of lying about a missing-person case was charged with several crimes, including falsifying a report in which he claimed he had taken the missing man to a hospital, police said.

Washburn Police Sgt. Chandler Cole resigned after being charged with aggravated forgery, tampering with public records or information, falsifying physical evidence, and unsworn falsification, according to court records. He was arrested on March 29.

Cole said he had no comment when reached by The Associated Press.

The charges, first reported by WAGM-TV, stem from the case of a missing person who appeared to be distressed when seen walking along a road on Jan. 30.

Cole reported that he had picked up Erik Foote and dropped him off at a convenience store, but he told Foote's parents he took him to the hospital.

An investigation concluded Cole altered his report to reflect a hospital drop-off. But there is no hospital record to support the claim.

Foote has yet to be located in a case that has riveted the community of 1,500 people, which has organized another search party to look for him this weekend.

The Aroostook County Sheriff's Office is now handling the investigation.

The town is in the process of deciding whether to keep a police department. Washburn's police chief retired Jan. 31, Cole resigned in February and a young officer is working elsewhere, Town Manager Donna Turner said.

For now, the Sheriff's Office is providing coverage while Washburn is without police.

This story has been corrected to say Foote was seen Jan. 30, not March 30.

definitelymyrealname on April 14th, 2024 at 19:19 UTC »

Not much info to go on in the article but there have been some previous cases of cops dumping people (often intoxicated people) in inappropriate places and they end up dying to the elements. Some departments have a history of doing this as a kind of punishment, drive them out somewhere remote in winter and tell them to walk back. Maybe the guy never returned and the cop is panicking.

JTalbotIV on April 14th, 2024 at 18:29 UTC »

The fact that the other cops scattered tells me some real bad shit is about to come to light.

bmcgowan89 on April 14th, 2024 at 17:49 UTC »

As Stephen King starts typing