Fore Note: The officer in the story below was formerly a Lenoir City police officer and was involved in a shooting with a DUI suspect back in 2016. WVLT reported that later, he resigned from LCPD after an incident with a stun gun.
TBI: Crossville detective faces assault charge, accused of assaulting person after criminal interview The Tennessee Bureau of Investigation said the person had to be taken to a local hospital, where he was treated and released.

CROSSVILLE, Tenn. — A detective with the Crossville Police Department is facing an assault charge after the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation said he assaulted a person after a criminal interview on June 3.

The TBI said Tyrel Lorenz "used physical force while affecting the arrest of the subject." In a release, the TBI also said the person had to be taken to a local hospital where he was treated and released.

The TBI said Lorenz turned himself in at the Cumberland County Jail after a Cumberland County grand jury returned an indictment on Aug. 5. Lorenz was released on his own recognizance.

According to a January 2019 release from the Crossville Police Department, Lorenz was recognized and presented with an award for "going the extra mile to help protect the citizens of our community."

Additional information, such as the circumstances surrounding the criminal interview and whether Lorenz still works for the police department, was not immediately available. This story will be updated when more information is available.


March 2016
 
Lenoir City officer in fatal shooting has unblemished record Knoxville News Sentinel

KINGSTON — The Lenoir City police officer who jumped into the bed of a pickup driven by a DUI suspect and fatally shot him as he drove off has an unblemished six-year history in law enforcement, personnel records show.

Tyrel Lorenz, 29, who stands 6 feet, 8 inches tall and weighs more than 250 pounds, shot Joshua William Grubb, 30, "multiple times," authorities said, as Grubb drove away from Bimbo's, a convenience store that sells fireworks in Lenoir City.

Lorenz had repeatedly yelled for Grubb to stop before firing his department-issued Glock model 22 .40-caliber handgun. That weapon is now in the custody of the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation, which is in charge of the probe.

Grubb's two brothers said Tuesday they've been asked by attorney Christopher Beavers of the Knoxville firm of Banks & Jones not to respond to media requests for comment. Beavers didn't return phone calls.

"We're just told not to answer any questions," said Matthew Grubb, a Marine stationed at Camp Lejeune, N.C., who was with their mother, Linda Grubb, at her Clinton residence on Tuesday.

Joshua Grubb was the youngest of Linda Grubb's three sons. The other brother, Daniel Grubb, lives in Knoxville and also would not comment.

Matthew Grubb said his brother's body was still in the custody of the TBI. An autopsy has been conducted, but the findings haven't been released.

Joshua Grubb, a Clinton resident, had an Anderson County arrest record for offenses ranging from a public intoxication charge in 2004 to a first-offense DUI in 2013. He had been found in violation of his probation on four occasions, records show.

Lorenz, who Lenoir City Police Chief Don White said recently moved to Oak Ridge, remains on paid administrative leave while the TBI investigation proceeds. White said Lorenz is "mentally doing well," and a team of counselors is coming in Thursday for a critical incident debriefing with him and other officers who responded.

Lorenz joined the Lenoir City Police Department last summer, the chief said, and has never been disciplined during his brief tenure.

"He performed at a very professional level," White said.

The chief said Lorenz also received what he called a "good review" from the Roane County Sheriff's Office, where Lorenz worked for five years, and was deemed eligible to be rehired there.

Lorenz, a Harriman High School graduate, was hired as a corrections officer for Roane County in March 2010. In 2012, he applied to be a road officer and stated on his application for basic police school that he'd never been convicted of any criminal offenses.

Lorenz became a deputy that year and subsequently passed a variety of training regimens. One letter of commendation, from Roane County Sheriff's Office Capt. Tim Hawn, is in his personnel file for helping out with civil process papers when that wasn't part of his normal duties.

"He was a good officer," Chief Deputy Tim Phillips said.

Lorenz resigned "effective immediately" in a memo to Sheriff Jack Stockton in mid-April last year to take the Lenoir City Police Department job.

White and 9th Judicial District Attorney General Russell Johnson on Monday afternoon issued a statement about the episode that led to the shooting, which erupted just after 1 a.m. Sunday in Lenoir City.

Authorities had received an E-911 call from the Ruby Tuesday's restaurant across from Bimbo's on U.S. Highway 321 about three people who had just left the restaurant parking lot in a pickup.

Lorenz was questioning the three as they were getting gas at Bimbo's and had placed Grubb's companion, Brandon Lawrence Taylor, 31, of Clinton, in handcuffs when Grubb began driving off.

Lorenz "somehow ended up in the bed of the pickup," according to the statement, and the vehicle went into oncoming traffic down the wrong side of the four-lane, divided highway — crossing the I-75 overpass — before Lorenz shot Grubb and the pickup crashed into a utility pole, authorities said.

Lorenz immediately tried to render first aid to the mortally wounded Grubb, according to authorities.

Taylor, meanwhile, had wiggled out of his handcuffs, slipped away to two nearby hotels in a bid to use a phone and was eventually nabbed in the bathroom of the Days Inn, police said. He was charged with public intoxication and evading arrest.

Also arrested was another passenger in the pickup, Toni Ann Sutton, 40, of Heiskell, who was charged with drug paraphernalia possession.

If the results of the TBI investigation are complete by then, Johnson said the case will go before the Loudon County grand jury when it convenes again in mid-April.
August 2016
Attorney: Lenoir City to pay family of man killed by cop

Lenoir City will pay the family of a man who was shot and killed by a police officer a six figure sum, according to the family's attorney.

Body camera video shows Officer Tyrel Lorenz scrambling into the back of Josh Grubb's pickup truck, screaming at him to stop, then firing nine times through the back window, killing Grubbs back in March. It happened just after 1 a.m. at Bimbo's convenience store on Highway 321 near the I-75 interchange. At the time, Grubb was suspected of driving under the influence.

Grubb's family and the city struck a deal Monday, but the family's attorney, T. Scott Jones, has not disclosed the settlement amount.

"We were very pleased to bring the chapter of the actions of the 'cowboy cop' to a successful conclusion for a very deserving family in a situation that should have never occurred," Jones said.
 

In April, a Grand Jury decided not to indict Lenoir City Police Officer Tyrel Lorenz on manslaughter, reckless homicide, criminally negligent homicide and official misconduct charges. They said he feared for his life.

"He had to stop the truck, he reacted in attempt to stop the truck, and once he was in the back of the truck, his life and other lives were in danger and that's why he fired the shots,” said District Attorney General Russell Johnson of the 9th Judicial District said after the decision.

A toxicology report shows Grubb had alcohol, meth, and prescription drugs in his system.

Lorenz has since resigned from his post as a patrol officer. According to Chief Don White, Lorenz said it was time to take his career in a different direction.

The shift before he resigned, Lorenz made an arrest using his stun gun, White said. The department has not looked into whether the use of force was justified since Lorenz is no longer working for the department and no complaint was filed.


2016

WVLT-Former Lenoir City Police Officer Tyrel Lorenz resigned after an incident involving a stun gun. Lorenz made headlines in March for ending up in the bed of a truck and shooting at a suspected drunk driver.

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