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Melvin Cooper Fleming

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Melvin Cooper Fleming

Birth
Davidson County, Tennessee, USA
Death
25 Jun 1942 (aged 32)
Nashville, Davidson County, Tennessee, USA
Burial
Nashville, Davidson County, Tennessee, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Deputy Fleming and Detective Charles Mundy, of the Nashville Police Department were shot and killed by a drunk man who Deputy Fleming had attempted to arrest. The man had entered a restaurant and became belligerent when the staff refused to serve him more alcohol. Deputy Fleming arrived on the scene and was shot three times when he attempted to take the suspect into custody. Detective Mundy and two other detectives were driving by the restaurant when they heard the shots and Detective Mundy began to chase the man on foot. During the exchange of gunfire both men were fatally wounded a second Detective was wounded. The suspect had been released from a Kentucky prison after serving only six years for the murders of Patrolman James Hayes and Patrolman Robert Rowland, of the Kentucky Highway Patrol, when they attempted to arrest him and his brother for operating an illegal whiskey still in their service station. Deputy Fleming had been with the Davidson County Sheriffs Department for two years and was survived by his wife and two daughters.
Deputy Fleming and Detective Charles Mundy, of the Nashville Police Department were shot and killed by a drunk man who Deputy Fleming had attempted to arrest. The man had entered a restaurant and became belligerent when the staff refused to serve him more alcohol. Deputy Fleming arrived on the scene and was shot three times when he attempted to take the suspect into custody. Detective Mundy and two other detectives were driving by the restaurant when they heard the shots and Detective Mundy began to chase the man on foot. During the exchange of gunfire both men were fatally wounded a second Detective was wounded. The suspect had been released from a Kentucky prison after serving only six years for the murders of Patrolman James Hayes and Patrolman Robert Rowland, of the Kentucky Highway Patrol, when they attempted to arrest him and his brother for operating an illegal whiskey still in their service station. Deputy Fleming had been with the Davidson County Sheriffs Department for two years and was survived by his wife and two daughters.


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