Tennessee Sheriff Oddie Shoupe was already under fire for his controversial comments in support of police violence during a chase. Now, it appears that after that chase, he mistakenly told a Tennessee mother than her son had died.
Body camera video shows the chaos last April as officers ran to the pick-up truck they fired on after a two county chase in Tennessee.
"Get on the ground," one officer shouted as he approached the pick-up.
"Subject has sustained gunshots," another officer shouted.
They discovered the driver of the pick-up had been shot.
They then immediately questioned who he was.
Officer: "Anybody know who he is?"
Another Officer: "No."
Another Officer: "Jason Kirby"
Officer: "Ok."
They quickly identify the driver as Jason Kirby.
Kirby's mom, Pat Randolph, soon learned on social media that her son was dead.
"It was terrible. It was a nightmare you know my son was dead. I just couldn't handle it," Randolph said.
She immediately left for the hospital, but drove up on the shooting scene.
That's where White County Sheriff Oddie Shoupe told her in person that her son was dead.
"He said it just like, 'well your son's dead.' That's it you know. 'He shot at us and we had to take him out.' No concern, nothing," Randolph said.
But an investigation would later reveal the driver didn't shoot at officers and in fact didn't even have a gun. Shoupe told Randolph to go on to the hospital. And even there, she says she was told it was her son who was killed.
But incredibly it turns out Jason Kirby was not dead. He was alive and working, away from his phone.
He did not realize his entire family thought he had been killed. He finally saw his mom that evening.
"I went in and hugged her and she just cried for like hours you know," Kirby said.
"It makes me mad yeah. It makes me really mad," Kirby said.
The man who was actually killed was Michael Dial. The chase involving Dial began in neighboring Dekalb County.
Officers tried to pull him over for driving on a suspended license. But Dekalb County ended the chase at the county line.
Radio traffic reveals at that time they knew exactly who the driver was.
"Notify White County it's going to be a late model Chevy truck.... subject should come back to a Michael Dial," the DeKalb County dispatcher said.
Jason Kirby admitted he's had run-ins with the White County Sheriff in the past.
"Me and him's had a few altercations in the past, you know. It took me a while to straighten up and get right," Kirby said.
Their history made the sheriff's comments to another deputy right after the shooting -- caught on a body camera they didn't know was recording -- even more disturbing.
Sheriff: "I told em, I said take him out."
Deputy: "I heard"
Sheriff: "Damn I don't give a sh**."
Deputy: "It wasn't long after that I heard 'shots fired.'"
Sheriff: "They said 'we're ramming.' I said 'don't ram him shot him. Fu** that sh**."
Kirby was shocked when he heard the sheriff, who at the time thought he was the one dead, talk about the pursuit and his order to use deadly force.
Sheriff: "I love this sh**. God I tell you what I thrive on it."
"He's proud of killing that guy — thinking it was me," Kirby said
It is not clear whether Dekalb County ever told White County the name of the suspect they were chasing. Pat Randolph feels for the Dial family, and she is still traumatized by hearing the sheriff say her son was dead.
"It tears me up. It's just a nightmare. Why did he assume it was him. Didn't even check into anything before he assumed it was him," Randolph said.
Shoupe did not respond to a call requesting for an interview or offer an explanation about what happened.
Michael Dial's wife is suing the county and the sheriff's office has said he cannot comment because of the lawsuit.