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Kansas City Fraternal Order of Police President Brad Lemon appears before the Board of Police Commissioners on Dec. 22.
Jackson County Prosecutor Jean Peters Baker dismissed 31 counts against a towing company owner after audio surfaced of Brad Lemon, president of the Fraternal Order of Police, threatening criminal action if a family car wasn t immediately released.
The Jackson County Prosecutor’s Office on Tuesday dismissed 31 charges against a Kansas City tow truck company owner after he turned over a phone call of threats being made by the president of Kansas City s police union.
Jackson County Prosecutor Jean Peters Baker dropped the charges against Allen T. Bloodworth, the owner of Private Party Impound, because Brad Lemon, president of the Fraternal Order of Police, Lodge 99, appeared to threaten Bloodworth in the audio recording.
City of Kansas City
The Jackson County Prosecutor’s Office on Tuesday dismissed 31 charges against a Kansas City tow truck company owner after he turned over a phone call of threats being made by the president of Kansas City s police union.
Jackson County Prosecutor Jean Peters Baker dropped the charges against Allen T. Bloodworth, the owner of Private Party Impound, because Brad Lemon, president of the Fraternal Order of Police, Lodge 99, appeared to threaten Bloodworth in the audio recording.
Lemon called Bloodworth on June 15, 2019, trying to get an impounded car owned by his family released without proper paperwork. Bloodworth refused, and Lemon reminded him that he was once investigated for felony property crimes.