Fear & Loading: Sheriff Suspends Law Enforcement Activities Due to Budget Shortfalls

posted on February 12, 2019
** When you buy products through the links on our site, we may earn a commission that supports NRA's mission to protect, preserve and defend the Second Amendment. **
break-in.jpg

Martin County (Ky.) Sheriff John Kirk advised residents in his jurisdiction earlier this month to “… lock your doors, load your guns and get a barking, biting dog” on his personal Facebook page after he announced his department was suspending law enforcement activities due to budget. The department’s bookkeeper has already been laid off, office hours limited to 20 and the evening deputy now performs the less-lifesaving daytime duties of serving papers and working as bailiff, among others. “We have always provided police protection, but without funding we can no longer do this,” he told the Associated Press news wire service.

Nearly 13,000 people live in Martin County, which encompasses 231 square miles of eastern Kentucky. The coal-producing area reaps the benefits of taxes collected by the state from mining, funds redistributed to local governments, but that revenue stream that has shrunk by 80 percent since 2012. 

Emergency calls will be fielded by the Kentucky State Police until there’s an end to the financial impasse—if one is reached. The Associated Press story warns, however, it “… sometimes has just one officer patrolling multiple counties.”

A late December outage of 9-1-1 service in a widespread area of the United States indicates major metropolitan areas—even those with well-funded tax bases—can also face challenges when summoning first responders. In December, residents in part of at least three states were unable to call into the emergency number due to an outage at CenturyLink. Efforts were made to inform the public to use alternate numbers, but by Dec. 28 Federal Communications Commission Chairman Ajit Pai announced an investigation was being launched.

“The CenturyLink service outage is … completely unacceptable, and its breadth and duration are particularly troubling,” Pai said in a statement reported by the Washington Post. “This inquiry will include an examination of the effect that CenturyLink’s outage appears to have had on other providers’ 9-1-1 services.”

 

Latest

Us Army 250 Th Part 3 1
Us Army 250 Th Part 3 1

250 Years of the U.S. Army: Bolt-Actions & Semi-Automatics on the Battlefield

In just a few decades, the U.S. Army would see itself go from a single-shot, blackpowder design in the form of the Trapdoor Springfield to a modern, semi-automatic fighting rifle in the M1 Garand.

Modernized & Economical Muzzleloaders: The CVA Optima XP & XP-SB

CVA's longest-lasting muzzleloader design, the Optima, has been updated in 2026 with "modern ergonomics and modularity."

MidwayUSA Awards $7.5 Million in Cash Grants to Support Youth Shooting Teams

MidwayUSA Foundation recently announced that it concluded its most recent grant cycle, which resulted in a total payout of more than $7.5 million to youth shooting teams and organizations nationwide.

The Constitutional Concealed Carry Reciprocity Act is on the Move

The story of American freedom, now almost 250 years on since delegates to the Second Continental Congress signed the Declaration of Independence, leads irrevocably to the Constitutional Concealed Carry Reciprocity Act.

Mixing & Matching Gun Parts: What’s The Catch?

How would one about verifying that parts from one gun would fit and function on another of the same make and model? What about aftermarket parts sold as replacement parts for hard-to-get original parts?

U.S. Army & Navy Award FN a $9.9 Million Contract for Machine Guns

FN America has been awarded a $9.9 million contract to supply the U.S. Army and U.S. Navy with FN M240B machine guns, continuing the supply of FN America’s longest-standing military weapons platform.

Interests



Get the best of American Rifleman delivered to your inbox.