Suspect in Tennessee Highway Patrol Shooting Had Violent Criminal History

Braze Rucker

A man accused of taking part in the shooting of a Tennessee Highway Patrol (THP) officer in Putnam County had a history of violent crime, according to court records.

Braze Rucker was charged with a litany of crimes committed during a robbery attempt in Nashville in 2013. The charges stemmed from a robbery in which Rucker shot one person, leaving her paralyzed.

Those crimes included two counts of attempted criminal homicide, two counts of especially aggravated robbery, one count of aggravated robbery, one count of possession of a firearm during the commission of a dangerous felony, one count of attempted first-degree murder, and one count of aggravated assault.

In 2016, though, nearly all of those charges were dismissed.

He was convicted only of aggravated assault and attempted, especially aggravated assault and sentenced to 14 years in prison. He served less than five years before being released back onto the streets.

Rucker (pictured above) was a passenger in the car driven by Timothy Davis Jr. last week. Davis allegedly opened fire on THP Trooper Adam Cothron, who sustained serious injuries and remains hospitalized at the time of publication.

Rucker fled to Kentucky, where he was captured on Sunday by the Kentucky State Police. The next day, he was extradited to Tennessee and booked into the Putnam County Jail on charges of criminal responsibility of facilitation of a felony.

According to the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation (TBI), Davis was apprehended on Tuesday night. He has been charged with attempted first-degree murder.

“Investigative efforts revealed the trooper stopped a white Kia Forte, with a temporary tag, driven by Timothy Laquan Davis, Jr. (DOB 7/9/1999),” TBI said in a Wednesday release. “As the trooper approached the vehicle, the driver fired upon him, critically wounding him. At the time of this release, the trooper remained hospitalized in Nashville.”

Davidson County District Attorney General Glenn Funk, who has been in office since 2014, has taken heat for his office’s soft-on-crime policies.

In 2017, he launched a “restorative justice” program in the district, in which the perpetrator of a crime who apologizes to the victim and takes responsibility could receive lighter punishments.

“What has to happen is the offender has to accept responsibility,” Funk told WKRN at the time. “They have to admit to what they did, they have to meet with the victim, they find out what they need to do to make the victim whole, and then they have to take concrete steps to try to make the victim whole.”

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Pete D’Abrosca is a reporter at The Tennessee Star and The Star News Network. Follow Pete on X/Twitter.

 

 

 

 

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3 Thoughts to “Suspect in Tennessee Highway Patrol Shooting Had Violent Criminal History”

  1. Hugh Brooks

    The GOP has had total control of Tennessee since 2011 Why are these thugs still being able to “game the system”?
    Restorative justice. What a farce.
    I am tired of hearing GOP officeholders give wonderful speeches at Reagan Day Dinners about how tough on crime they are!

  2. Glenn Funk Should Be Ousted

    WHAT THE HELL does a convicted repeat violent offender have to do to convince the justice system that this monster thug does not deserve to walk as a free man ever again. He himself has proven this to the world.
    I don’t give a damn if idiots like Glenn Funk disagree with that. Glenn let a crazy killer go last year, & the same “apologetic”, criminally insane black thug, then assassinated a beautiful young white college student that was just out jogging. He should get the death penalty, Glenn Funk.
    We use to have a prison for the Criminally Insane. It was Deberry Institute. We also use to have a Mentally ill asylum.
    I’d like to ask our Tennessee State Legislators to consider reinstating these facilities. We have serious crazy people running the streets. Too crazy to even put in a regular prison. And then we have crazy District Attorneys, who will not prosecute. They are all a danger to our society.
    And for those who blame guns, these animals steal the guns & they don’t give a (bleep) about your damn gun laws.
    Why can’t Glenn Funk be charged by our State Attorney General with accessory to murder, when he releases a known murderer onto the streets? GLENN FUNK is a clear & present danger to innocent people.

  3. JRin

    Build MORE prisons and pass a “Three Strikes” law for felony crime. Mandatory life in prison without parole for anyone who shoots at a police officer, whether or not the officer is hit.

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