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Jury finds no officer wrongdoing in central Montana fatal high-speed chase

Posted at 9:16 PM, Jun 25, 2019
and last updated 2019-06-25 23:16:03-04

GREAT FALLS- A coroner’s inquest determined Tuesday law enforcement were not at fault in a case involving a Great Falls man who died after leading deputies on a high-speed chase.

In the early morning hours of Dec. 12, 2018, a Cascade County sheriff’s deputy attempted to make a traffic stop in Vaughn.

Tracey Johnston, 46, intentionally backed into the deputy’s car and drove west on Highway 200, according to the Cascade County Sheriff’s Office.

Johnston reportedly threw objects at the deputy’s vehicle and reached speeds over 100 miles per hour.

“He had free range over the road. At times, he was going on opposite sides and swerving between four lanes,” Deputy Casey Gervais said.

At one point, Johnston stopped and again tried to ram the deputy’s vehicle.

“I instructed him at the time to discontinue the pursuit,” Deputy Jayson Groskreutz said.

The chase continued into Lewis and Clark County where Johnston lost control of his vehicle. He was ejected and died at the scene.

During the inquest, a juror asked a responding deputy why the pursuit was initiated.

“The minute that the deputy’s vehicle is rammed, there’s a use of force that’s against us. If he’s willing to do that to law enforcement, I don’t know what else he’s willing to do to the general public,” Groskreutz said.

An inquest is required when a person dies while being taken into custody or in the presence of law enforcement.

Story by Elizabeth Transue, MTN News