Saturday, November 23, 2024
33.0°F

Libby man pleads guilty in shooting incident

by SCOTT SHINDLEDECKER
The Western News | January 10, 2023 7:00 AM

A Libby man who was accused of a gun crime last summer after an incident involving his partner and a truck driver last month on U.S. 2, recently pleaded guilty.

Charles Fernley Woods Jr., 67, entered a guilty plea to an amended charge of felony criminal endangerment in Lincoln County District Court on Jan. 3.

Woods was originally charged with felony assault with a weapon, one count of misdemeanor partner or family member assault, and one misdemeanor count of criminal destruction of a communication device. Those charges were dropped as a result of a plea deal with Deputy County Attorney Jeff Zwang.

Woods Jr. is scheduled to be sentenced on March 6.

According to the probable cause statement by Lincoln County Sheriff’s Office Deputy James Derryberry, he responded to a location on July 1, 2022, on Either Way North and learned that Woods Jr. thought his partner was having an affair with a truck driver. Woods confronted the driver and his partner on U.S. 2. Woods told the truck driver to leave and when the driver turned his back and began to walk back to his truck, Woods fired a round from his handgun into the ground.

Derryberry then wrote in his report that after Woods and his partner returned home, he allegedly tampered with the home phone so she couldn’t call law enforcement. Woods also disconnected a wire to the battery in his partner’s vehicle in an effort to keep her from leaving the residence, according to the court document.

The woman then walked away and she reported hearing a gun shot and believed Woods had shot himself. Woods allegedly told Derryberry he fired a gun shot because he wanted her to believe he shot himself.

Later, Derryberry found Woods’ partner walking down U.S. 2. When interviewing her, she said she was afraid Woods was going to shoot her, according to the court document.

The officer also spoke to the truck driver who was sleeping in his vehicle at mile marker 75 on U.S. 2. He said he turned his back to Woods because he believed he had a gun and was afraid because he didn’t carry a gun.