Man arrested for "unlawful photography" back in court
For those of us familiar with Scott Conover’s story, it began with his arrest for “unlawful photography” last year after he photographed a Tennessee cop against his wishes.
It was a story that sparked a furor across the Internet, rousing even the most jaded civil libertarians into disbelief. A story that put the spotlight on Johnson County, Tennessee; an Appalachian boondock in the northeast corner of the state.
A story that ended up crashing my server (check out the above video or click on these links to refresh your memory). 
After all, although it is not uncommon to get arrested for photographing cops, police usually have to find some unrelated charge to justify the arrest, such as disorderly conduct, trespassing, refusing a lawful order, resisting arrest or interfering with an investigation.
But unlawful photography?
It turns out there is a such law in Tennessee but it pertains to minors and pornography. The cop Conover photographed was standing on the side of the road in full uniform issuing a traffic citation. He didn’t exactly have an expectation of privacy.
Not surprisingly, Conover ended up getting the charge dismissed in October, including the accompanying charge of pointing a laser at an officer. That was the third time he been arrested since moving to Tennessee from Florida in 2003, according to court records obtained from the Johnson County Circuit Court Clerk. And the third time his charges were dismissed.
It’s been that way ever since he filed a complaint against the Johnson County Sheriff’s Office for severely beating a man in the parking lot of his bar a few months after moving to Johnson County.
And now there has been another arrest. This one stemming from an altercation with a man he says had been stalking his daughter. A man he accuses of being a child pornographer.
That man is now suing Conover for $250,000 for aggravated assault and libel.
William Cockett, the county attorney who filed this arrest warrant against Conover in this case, also co-owns the law firm representing the man suing Conover. Not that he will admit this is a conflict of interest.
Conover, who has since moved back to Florida, will be in court on June 24 for his arraignment.
“They have been retaliating against me for years,” he said. “They don’t like it when you stand up to them. They don’t like you to be a fighter.”
To hear Conover tell the story, it sounds like something out of the movie Deliverance. A backwater tale of backdoor shenanigans. A one-man stand in a one-horse town.
“About a year into our relocation, I witnessed a severe case of police brutality,” he explained.
“The cops pulled someone over on the highway in my parking lot. They beat the crap out of him. They were kicking him, punching him, spraying him in the face with mace. And he was handcuffed the whole time.
“I went down and talked to the sheriff the next day. I told him those guys should be arrested. The sheriff didn’t do anything about it.”
So Conover bailed the guy out of jail, helped him find a lawyer and encouraged him to file a lawsuit. And ever since then, he’s been dealing with the Johnson County Sheriff’s Office.
Conover says deputies continually harassed his customers at his bar over the years, waiting for them to pull out of the parking lot before pulling them over.
Court records show he’s been arrested for assault on a police officer, trespassing, telephone harassment and illegal photography. And each time it’s been dismissed.
The trespassing and telephone harassment charges stem from an August 2004 incident in which he called and banged on his neighbor’s door looking for his daughter who had gone missing.
And the assault on a police officer charge stems from a September 2005 incident in which deputies showed up to his bar claiming someone had reported an assault, but Conover claims they fabricated the call.
The report states that once the deputy showed up to the bar, “the defendant said I don’t like you and you have ruined my business. He then started pointing down the road and struck me in my left forearm. The defendant said he was going to get me, then touched me on the left elbow saying he was suing the county and taking me to federal court.”
“When we showed up to court, the judge asked the cop, ‘Did he hit you’ and the cop said, ‘no’, so the case was dismissed,” Conover said.
Conover did follow through on his promise of filing a federal lawsuit and won.
“We got an out of court settlement and they ended up booting out the sheriff and the lead investigators in the department.”
So a new sheriff was elected and everything was fine for a couple of years until it started up again, he said.
“They started hiring new deputies who wanted to get a mark on their belt so they started harassing my customers, myself and my family,” he said.
So last June, when a deputy pulled one of his customers over, Conover drove up to them and snapped a photo and was arrested for unlawful photography.
Meanwhile, one of his customers began stalking his wife and daughter, calling them on the phone and making them uncomfortable, he said.
The man, which we will call WB for now, lived across the street from Conover’s business and home.
“He would say a lot of provocative things to my daughter,” Conover said. “He is about 56 years old. She was 12 at the time.”
Around this time, a man who runs the local internet company and computer repair shop told Conover that WB had brought in his computer to be repaired and had found child pornography on it.
The man, Charles Mark Combs, who runs High Country Online, then told Conover about his discovery, which led to Conover filing a restraining order against WB on August 27th, 2008.
It is unclear if Combs ever reported his discovery to the local authorities but he did sign a sworn statement on February 21, 2009, confirming that he found child pornography on the computer and that he even placed a text file staying “gotcha” on the computer.
After Combs told him of his discovery, Conover decided he needed to shut his business down and move back to Florida.
“It just got too dangerous for my family here,” he said.
On September 9, 2008, with his family in his truck about to depart to Florida, Conover and WB were involved in an auto accident in front of their respective homes.
Conover claims WB rear-ended him. WB claims Conover pulled in front of him and slammed on the brakes.
Conover claims WB threatened to kill him, so he punched him in the face. WB claims Conover threatened to kill him before punching him in the face.
Conover says that WB then backed up his car as if to run him over, so he hopped back in his truck and drove back to the rear of his building, where he called the Johnson County Sheriff’s Office to report the accident.
“I wanted them to arrest him because he had violated the restraining order,” Conover said. “They didn’t do anything about it.”
On October 21, 2008, after having moved back to Florida and hearing no updates on the case, Conover fired off a letter to the Johnson County Commissioners in which he berated the sheriff’s office for not enforcing the restraining order against WB. He also informed them that WB “was involved in child pornography.”
That same day, WB retained attorney Jason A. Creech, who works for the local firm Smith and Cockett – co-owned by Johnson County Attorney William Cockett - and filed a $250,000 suit against Conover for aggravated assault and libel, stemming from the fact that Conover called him a child pornographer in his letter to the commissioners.
After receiving no response from county commissioners from his letter, Conover fired off another letter to the commission on November 26, 2008 where he berated them for not responding to his previous letter and accused the entire county of corruption and xenophobia to outsiders.
“I feel like I moved to Russia instead of Johnson County, TN, for if you don’t go with the flow, or if you talk out of line, you will be dragged off and incarcerated then viciously prosecuted for fictitious charges, ridiculed, humiliated, exploited in the newspaper, discriminated against and run out of town.”
So on December 13, 2008, County Attorney Cockett used these two letters as evidence before a grand jury to indict Conover on aggravated assault and leaving the scene of an accident charges stemming from the September 9 collision with WB.
On December 18, Conover flew back to Tennessee to turn himself in where he was released that same day on bail. He then returned to Florida to await the arraignment.
As of this writing, he is holed up in a motel just outside Johnson County awaiting his Wednesday morning arraignment.
“I hope I can get out of this so I’ll never have to come back to this state again,” he said. “It’s unbelievable what I’ve experienced here. Unbelievable.”
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Comments
There’s obviously a whole other side to this story than the skewed version Conover is trying to peddle.
@Marc: A side of the story where taking photographs of police officers is illegal?
@Marc – Yes, there is a whole other side to this story. But what makes you so certain that Conover’s version is the skewed one?
Please, skip the “hillbilly” references. As your site makes abundantly clear, this attitude isn’t restricted to small towns in the country or the south.
Your ad hominem descriptions of the town, the area and the people are unnecessary and insulting.
I was fine with the article up until the Deliverance video at the end. You had led me to believe you were actually somewhat supporting Conover and the facts surrounding the ordeal, then you showed your true feelings toward the situation by trying to make a joke.
And oh yea, you got the years wrong in half the article. Good job proof reading. Stick to the types of articles that actually get printed in papers Carlos…
Dates have been corrected. It was 4:30 a.m. when I finished this. I gave up several hours of sleep to ensure this gets out before his arraignment.
But those dates are based on actual records I requested, so
Datech, I am not just going to wait around for published stories to write my articles.
The reason I included the Deliverance video was because I made a reference to it in the article.
Conover has continually referred to his situation as small town shenanigans. And that’s exactly what it sounds like.
I actually like that video and the song, so I threw it in there to educate younger people who might have no idea what Deliverance is.
But hey, I didn’t realize I had such a sensitive readership.
So the video has been linked to the part of the article where the movie is mentioned, not that it would make some of you feel any better.
As a former police reporter who worked in neighboring Sullivan County, I’m well acquainted with how the culture is out there. And coming from a D.C. boy, it is quite backwoods I have to say. I remember coming across the sheriff way out in the boondocks in one of the counties in southwest Virginia who showed off a jar of moonshine he kept in his cabinet that he confiscated from someone. (Don’t think he actually drank it, I think he thinks of it more as a trophy. Although he admitted to drinking moonshine as a youth.)
There’s very much a good-ol-boy atmosphere among sheriff’s departments. Some are good people and some are folks who don’t take kindly to others messing in their business.
A few years back, I remember writing about a town corruption scandal in Appalachia, VA — not far from Johnson County and also in our newspaper’s coverage area. Town officials had offered residents things like bags of pork rinds in exchange for votes, and police were getting gambling kickbacks from local establishments. I was present when the (state troopers? I forgot) made the raids on the town. It made News of the Weird.
It is why I can totally believe Conover’s story, even if he may be embellishing.
BTW, I have personally worked on stories with Darius and Sara in that video. Sure brings back memories.
Sensitive? Not so much. And, since I’m generally a supporter of your position on this site, I think I’ve earned more than a dismissive sniff.
However, if you think that the stereotypes and insults you’ve liberally sprinkled in the story make it more interesting, knock yourself out. It’s your website. Just know that that kind of lack of professionalism hurts your arguments.
I couldn’t care less on which side you fall but let me tell you I live in Johnson County and the “law” applies only to those with the lack of balls to confront it. I’m using an alias for the sole purpose of not being sought out, and suffering retaliation. Don’t like the deliverance references that’s fine, I would prefer there be nothing but facts also, but the movie and the handing out of abuse in this county are one in the same.
Rick: That’s the insidious nature of the comments I object to…it makes it too easy to dismiss the whole story. I believe you, but the whole affair could have happened in NYC and no one would have blinked an eye, so the unnecessary references just make me more likely to just ignore the writer as ignorant in general.
And how, exactly, is this different than Iran? We’ve got law enforcement officers that literally “don’t like” what you’re doing, yet you’re breaking no law…but arrest you anyway. Don’t worry about that pesky “not breaking the law thing”, the clerics, um, the sheriff will make up a broken law for you.
While you might not get shot at and beat (there’s something), youre reputation and wallet will.
Am I the only person who sees that it’s the SAME thing, just in different clothing?
Pretty good post. I just came across your site and wanted to say
that I have really enjoyed browsing your posts. Anyway
I’ll be subscribing to your feed and I hope you write again soon!
Research the Battle of Athens, it’s along the same lines.
Cops are the same the world over.
Carlos,
I read the entire story. You have absolutely summed up our entire real life experiences in Johnson County,TN . I could actually write a book about our life there. While living there , I met a few people that you can really call true life friends. There are really some good people there, that deserve to have better leadership within the county government. Recently, while I was up there, awaiting my arraignment, the newspaper, had a picture of the mayor, that has been running the county /police department forever. In this article, he promised that he would not be running for office again, This is a blessing from God! These people need a change. The police dept. definitely needs to be investigated along with the power hungry individuals that use the police dept. for their individual needs. The true fact is , I was arrested 6 times within a period of 4 years , with charges all being dismissed , with absolutely no merit to them. And now with the 3 new charges, this makes a total of 9 times in 6 years. . I would definitely encourage anyone that is considering moving to Johnson CO. ,TN to a relaxing cabin retreat/ get-away , to reconsider it . I have recently filed a complaint with the US Justice Department, and the Attorney General for the State of Tennessee, and also sent a letter to TN State Senator Bob Corker, pleading for help for these citizens in the county, so that the next Scott Conover will not suffer the repercussions and blatant civil rights violations that I have. I encourage anyone in this county or in any other county, or state, to report civil right violations because they should not be tolerated whatsoever.
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