South Dakota Man Charged With Murder for Allegedly Running Down Chief Deputy During Police Chase

South Dakota Man Charged With Murder for Allegedly Running Down Chief Deputy During Police Chase
South Dakota Attorney General Marty Jackley leaves the U.S. Supreme Court in Washington on April 17, 2018. Andrew Harnik/AP Photo
The Associated Press
Updated:

South Dakota prosecutors charged a Sioux Falls man on Monday with first-degree murder and aggravated eluding in the death of a deputy who was struck while putting out spikes during a police chase.

Joseph Gene Hoek, 40, was ordered held without bail at his first court appearance in the death of Moody County Chief Deputy Ken Prorok, 51, of Wentworth, who died during the pursuit on Friday.

People close to Mr. Hoek described him as being on a “downward spiral” marked by drug use and escalating threats of violence, Special Agent Jeffrey Kollars of the South Dakota Division of Criminal Investigation wrote in a court filing dated Sunday.

South Dakota Attorney General Marty Jackley is prosecuting the case himself. He said he still needs to investigate any mitigating factors, then sit down with Mr. Prorok’s family, and then with the sheriff and his deputies, before deciding whether to seek the death penalty.

“I believe the attorney general should lead from the front and I’ve always tried to do that,“ Mr. Jackley told The Associated Press. ”Especially when it involves a law enforcement officer that gave the ultimate sacrifice.”

Mr. Hoek’s attorney, Manuel De Castro, told AP his initial impression is that Mr. Hoek was “overcharged,” and that “there are some mental health issues that need to be explored.” But he said he’s still gathering information.

“I know it’s an emotional case for everybody involved. But we'll go from there,” he said.

Mr. Kollars wrote that Madison police responded Friday afternoon to a call about a man, identified as Mr. Hoek, making “homicidal threats” near the business where the caller worked. Police spotted his car and tried to stop him, but Mr. Hoek sped off on Highway 34 toward Interstate 29, according to the agent.

The chase reached 115 mph (185 kph). Mr. Prorok stopped to deploy stop spikes across Highway 34. But a witness said he saw the approaching car intentionally swerve and strike the chief deputy before it went into the ditch and flipped, the agent wrote. Mr. Hoek ran off on foot. The witness followed Mr. Hoek, ran him down, and detained Mr. Hoek until officers arrived, the filing said.

Mr. Prorok died at the scene. Mr. Hoek was checked at a hospital but was not seriously hurt.

Mr. Kollars wrote that he interviewed Mr. Hoek after he waived his right to remain silent. The agent wrote that Mr. Hoek told him he had gone to the business to collect from the caller, who he said owed him money.

“When Hoek was told that a Deputy Sheriff was killed by his actions and decisions, he responded that he didn’t believe me,” the agent wrote. But Mr. Hoek had claimed that he has problems with anxiety and panic attacks that sometimes affect his memory, the agent said.

Investigators who searched the car found suspected THC vapes, suspected marijuana paraphernalia and “blunts,” and containers of cold medicine, the agent wrote. Outside the car they found an apparent bong and an unopened bottle of liquor, he said.

When asked about drugs, Mr. Hoek told authorities he suffered from pain and that he had obtained the prescription narcotic pain reliever hydrocodone on some emergency room visits. But he said many doctors denied him the medications he wanted. He said he had used medical marijuana for anxiety “days prior” and had been prescribed the anti-anxiety drug Xanax but couldn’t recall the last time he used it.

Mr. Hoek also said he had been kicked out of several relatives’ homes but did not specify why.

The person who called the police told investigators Mr. Hoek had been a “family friend” who “started scaring him” and “started acting weird lately,” which led the person to obtain no-contact and no-trespass orders last month, the agent wrote.

Mr. Hoek’s mother told investigators that she believed her son “was suffering from mental health issues and was self-medicating,” but was smart enough to fool mental health professionals who evaluated him, so he would get released quickly with no help. She also said he was addicted to dextromethorphan, a cough medicine that is sometimes abused.

One person said Mr. Hoek’s “downward spiral” escalated after she obtained an order for protection against him last month and that he became “increasingly physically violent,” the agent wrote.

By Steve Karnowski