Crime State Supreme Court lifts gag order on father who shot man he found with his 13-year-old daughter - Former police Chief rapes your underage daughter. Judge lets him out with no restrictions. Chief comes back & kidnaps your daughter. Shoot & kill him while he is kidnapping your daughter. Same Judge & DA gags you instantly and jails you for murder.

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Source: ArkTimes Archive:Archive.PH

The Arkansas Supreme Court on Thursday vacated a gag order in the case of Aaron Spencer, a Lonoke County man charged with second-degree murder in the death of Michael Fosler in October. Fosler, 67 at the time of his death, had previously been arrested and charged with several sexual offenses against Spencer’s teenage daughter.

Calling the Lonoke County Circuit Court’s gag order in the case a “gross abuse of discretion,” the Supreme Court struck the order in its entirety.

The facts of the case, which quickly drew attention inside and outside of Arkansas, are straightforward. Fosler was arrested in July and charged with 43 counts including sexual assault of a minor, internet stalking of a child, and possession of child pornography, some or all of which related to a relationship between Fosler and Spencer’s then-13-year-old daughter. Circuit Judge Barbara Elmore released Fosler on bond.

Late one night in October, Spencer told police, he heard his dogs barking and went to his daughter’s room to check on her. She was not there. Spencer called 911 to report her missing, then went looking for her.

A short time later, he found his daughter and Fosler in Fosler’s truck, and Spencer forced the truck off the road. This led to an altercation between the men, after which Spencer called 911 again to report that he’d shot Fosler. Fosler died at the scene.

The state charged Spencer with second-degree murder plus a firearm enhancement in November. Spencer’s case, like Fosler’s, was assigned to Judge Elmore.

In December, citing media coverage throughout the state and beyond, as well as statements from Spencer’s attorneys calling him a “heroic father,” the state requested a gag order. They asked Elmore to prohibit Spencer, his attorneys, any state or local agencies connected with the case, any judicial employees, any public officials and any subpoenaed witnesses from discussing any facts of the case in public.

Spencer objected to the gag order. He argued that it would violate both his due process rights to a fair and public trial and his First Amendment right to speak. He requested a hearing, in open court, on the state’s motion.

Thirty minutes after Spencer filed his response, Judge Elmore granted the state’s request for a gag order without holding a hearing.

t appears to the Court,” Elmore wrote, “that the dissemination by any means of public communication of any out-of-court statements relating to this case may interfere with the rights of the Defendant and the State of Arkansas to receive a fair and impartial trial.”

Elmore then went a step further and, without being asked by either side in the case, ordered that the entire matter be sealed.

The state Supreme Court was having none of it.
The justices said the order “was on its face a plain, manifest, clear, and gross abuse of discretion and in excess of its authority” and “decline[d] to uphold any part of the order in light of the order’s clear lack of an evidentiary basis as a whole.”

The court looked at three categories of people Elmore’s gag order sought to restrain: attorneys in the case, non-attorneys in the case, and the public at large. Regarding attorneys, the court said Arkansas’s ethics rules allow prior restraint of their extrajudicial speech only where that speech “poses a substantial likelihood of material prejudice to an ongoing criminal proceeding.” Non-attorney participants, however, could be restrained from speaking about a case “only to the extent that [their speech] poses a serious and imminent threat of material prejudice to an ongoing criminal proceeding.”

The court was especially critical of Elmore’s attempts to restrain the speech of other individuals who are not participating in the case:

Finally, we address prior restraints on the public, whose speech is afforded the most protection in the context of gag orders. Restraining the speech of the public raises obvious issues regarding lack of due process. We cannot fathom why the circuit court believed it could prohibit the speech of “any public official now holding office.” In fact, it is difficult to foresee any circumstance in which a prior restraint on the speech of a member of the public, which would include a public official, could be constitutional.

The justices also said a lower court should take other findings into account when considering a proposed gag order, such as whether the order is narrowly tailored to prohibit only what is necessary to protect the integrity of the proceedings. Judge Elmore made no such findings, the court said.

The court also addressed Elmore’s decision to seal the entire case. The justices pointedly called out Elmore for shielding all the case filings from the public as well as preventing the public from watching the proceedings:

Not only are the written records inaccessible to the public, but also, the briefs and statements from counsel at oral argument indicate that the Lonoke County Circuit Court’s courtroom was at least partially closed to the public during Spencer’s arraignment. Although it appears the circuit court intends to close further proceedings to the public, we caution the court from doing so without an evidentiary basis and adherence to the required constitutional analysis.

Associate Justice Nicholas Bronni wrote a scathing concurrence, joined by Associate Justices Shawn Womack and Cody Hiland, that went even further in its rebuke of Elmore’s actions.

Bronni said the gag order “is only one part of a troubling pattern of attempts to shield this case from public view — beginning with a nonpublic arraignment and ending with a handwritten note sealing the entire case from public view.”

“We cannot allow that pattern to continue unchecked,” Bronni wrote, adding that he would have invoked the court’s superintending authority and reassigned the case to a new judge. “Anything less suggests that what’s happened so far is within the acceptable range of disagreement or administration — and it isn’t.”

The case now returns to Lonoke County Circuit Court. No trial date has been scheduled at this time.

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Well any prediction on what happens at the pre-trial hearing on Friday? Will anyone care to cover this shit or is Aaron being left to hang?
Hearing and trial were continued.
Pretrial hearing is now 12/17/2025
Trial is set for 1/26/2026
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What is particularly interesting to me is that Judge Elmore has not recused herself, despite Justice Nicholas J. Bronni explicitly suggesting she do so.
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The defense also hasn't filed a motion to recuse yet, but that may be in the works now that they have more time.
 

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I view prison rape, beatings by prisoners, and death by prisoners to be a failure of the system. That’s actually cruel and unusual and doesn’t not facilitate a culture of rehabilitation.

The Death Penalty should be reserved in cases where someone does something heinous enough that you cannot give an equal punishment to the crime. A serial rapist isn’t being punished by having an adult time out for the rest of their life. A mass murder likely is getting fan letters from gross women. Just get a skull popper, throw them in a paupers grave, and send them to God for judgement. I think Japan has the right idea in that they are killed without fanfare. Just brought to a room one day and then disposed of. No media circus or endless appeals.
Very very based. "A serial rapist isn't being punished by having adult time out" – exactly. And let's not forget that even though the rapist in this news story deserves the worst, this does not mean we should reward all the other rapists and killers in prison right now by getting them "a toy to play with", so to speak. It's incredibly bad, psychologically too, that these people always have someone slightly worse to point to instead of taking a good look inward.

That being said, since you spoke of a "culture of rehabilitation": I do not believe rehabilitation works on a scale that would justify the damage being caused to innocents by the average rehabilitation driven policies. Ex-convicts mostly fall into two camps:
1) those who were mentally immature at the time of the crime and have caught up on growing up, so to speak, in prison (not because of prison time, but because of time passing generally)
2) those who learned to convincingly say that they're sorry, but are only really sorry for having been caught
 
I view prison rape, beatings by prisoners, and death by prisoners to be a failure of the system. That’s actually cruel and unusual and doesn’t not facilitate a culture of rehabilitation.

The Death Penalty should be reserved in cases where someone does something heinous enough that you cannot give an equal punishment to the crime. A serial rapist isn’t being punished by having an adult time out for the rest of their life. A mass murder likely is getting fan letters from gross women. Just get a skull popper, throw them in a paupers grave, and send them to God for judgement. I think Japan has the right idea in that they are killed without fanfare. Just brought to a room one day and then disposed of. No media circus or endless appeals.
A failing system will cling to abstractions, ad hocs, and generally misusing intended processes instead of seeking solutions and none are more invested in this process of slow failure cascade than those closest to the system.
 
. Ex-convicts mostly fall into two camps:
1) those who were mentally immature at the time of the crime and have caught up on growing up, so to speak, in prison (not because of prison time, but because of time passing generally)
2) those who learned to convincingly say that they're sorry, but are only really sorry for having been caught
One of the more realistic things to me about the Shawshank Redemption is that when Red tries to convince the parole board he's been successfully rehabilitated? They deny him because they know he's just saying what they want to hear. But, after he's become an old man? And he finally says that rehabilitation as a concept is bullshit? He can't cite any way his time incarcerated has changed him for the better? But he does know that now in his 60's? He's just too tired to ever commit another violent crime and just wants to spend the rest of his life left alone? He gets approved.....


(realistic in a psychological sense, rehab cannot fix the incorrigible. Not a that's-how-parole-boards-work sense, they're riddled with politicking and incompetence IRL, sadly.)
 
He is now running for sheriff.
Aaron Spencer, dad who killed daughter’s alleged molester, announces run for Lonoke County Sheriff
There are myriad ways a person might react when faced with a murder charge. One could hire an attorney and go into hiding, avoiding the press and anyone else who might want to report on your actions ahead of a trial. On the other hand, the accused might take to the airwaves, singing the song of his innocence to any outlet that will listen.

A third, less frequently used option? Run for sheriff against the sheriff whose department arrested you.

That’s the route chosen by Aaron Spencer, the Lonoke County man arrested last October for allegedly shooting and killing 67-year-old Michael Fosler after discovering him with Spencer’s missing daughter, then 13 years old.


In a video announcing his candidacy for Lonoke County’s top law enforcement position, Spencer described himself as “the father who acted to protect his daughter when the system failed him” and “a husband, a combat veteran of the 82nd Airborne Division, a contractor and a farmer.” He said he has “seen firsthand the failures in law enforcement and in our circuit court,” and he could no longer sit by silently.

“This campaign isn’t about me,” Spencer said. “It’s about every parent, every neighbor, every family who deserves to feel safe in their homes and safe in their community. It’s about restoring trust, where neighbors know law enforcement is on their side and families know they will not be left alone in a moment of need.”

The partisan primary election for sheriff is March 3, 2026. Spencer has become something of a cult hero for killing Fosler, and it’s not inconceivable he could ride his newfound notoriety into office. There’s just one wrinkle: He may not be eligible to be sheriff by the time the election gets here. In January, Spencer is going on trial for second-degree murder, and a felony conviction is a bar to holding office in Arkansas.

Spencer was arrested last fall and charged with second-degree murder in the shooting death of Fosler. The story quickly gained local and national attention due to Fosler’s alleged prior relationship with Spencer’s daughter.

According to court records, Fosler had been arrested in July 2024 and charged with 43 counts including sexual assault of a minor, internet stalking of a child, and possession of child pornography, some or all of which related to a relationship between Fosler and Spencer’s daughter. Circuit Judge Barbara Elmore released Fosler on bond.

Just after 1 a.m. on Oct. 8, 2024, according to records obtained by the Arkansas Times, Spencer called 911 to report his daughter missing. Spencer told police he’d been awakened by his dog barking, went to his daughter’s room to check on her, and saw she was gone. He said he suspected she was with Fosler.

The arrest affidavit says Spencer went to look for his daughter and Fosler after calling 911. A short time later, 911 dispatch got a second call from Spencer, who said he had located his daughter and the “man who kidnapped his daughter,” but that Fosler was “dead on the side of the road” and that “he had no choice.”

The affidavit contains Spencer’s recounting of how the deadly interaction unfolded. Spencer saw Fosler’s white Ford F-150 turn onto Highway 236 East, toward Fosler’s home. He turned around and chased after Fosler’s vehicle, flashing his lights and honking his horn to get Fosler to pull over. When the two vehicles arrived at an intersection, Spencer rammed his truck into the rear of Fosler’s, sending the F-150 into a ditch. The affidavit continues:

Spencer then stated that he exited his vehicle with his firearm in hand and ordered Fosler out of his vehicle and to lay down in the ditch. Spencer stated that he observed his daughter trying to exit the passenger side of the vehicle, but it appeared that Fosler had grabbed her and stopped her from getting out. Spencer then stated that Fosler exited his vehicle and had something in his hand, but [Spencer] did not know what it was. Spencer stated that Fosler then lunged towards him, saying “fuck you.” Spencer stated that he then opened fire on Fosler, emptying his weapon before jumping on top of [Fosler] and pistol whipping him. Spencer then stated that he got his daughter out of the vehicle and returned to his truck where he reloaded his weapon and called 911.
Spencer bonded out of the Lonoke County Jail the following day. In late November, prosecutors charged Spencer with second-degree murder and commission of a felony with a firearm. That same day, Spencer’s attorneys, Erin Cassinelli and Michael Kaiser, issued a statement calling Spencer “a decorated war hero who protected his country and a loving father whose heroic actions protected his family.” They said Fosler “repeatedly violated his child” and “kidnapped her in the dark of night to continue his assaults on her.”

The statement criticized prosecutors for bringing charges against Spencer at all and accused them of “perpetuating these horrors instead of protecting legitimate victims and punishing true criminal offenders.”

The following week, prosecutors asked Judge Elmore for an order preventing Spencer’s attorneys and anyone else from discussing the case publicly. Spencer’s attorneys filed a 19-page response to the prosecutor’s motion on Dec. 9. Less than 30 minutes later, Elmore granted the prosecutors’ motion and entered a gag order. She also sealed the entire case file, despite neither side requesting it. The Arkansas Supreme Court unsealed the case and lifted the gag order in a scathing opinion earlier this year.

If Spencer is eligible to run for office in March, he will face off against incumbent Lonoke County Sheriff John Staley, who was first elected in 2012 and has held the position since January 2013. Staley’s tenure has been rocky at times.

In 2021, Lonoke County deputy Sgt. Michael Davis fatally shot 17-year-old Hunter Brittain on the side of the road near Cabot when the teen was attempting to use a jug of antifreeze to chock his tires and prevent his truck from rolling backward toward the officer’s vehicle. Davis was fired for not having his body camera activated at the time of the shooting. He was later convicted of negligent homicide, and Brittain’s family sued the sheriff’s office.

The following year, video surfaced of Staley punching a Lonoke County jail inmate in 2019 as part of a search for contraband. Staley denied that the video showed “excessive force,” and claimed it was only getting noticed because of an election that was coming up at the time.

Staley and a former jail administrator were sued last year in federal court. That suit alleges Staley turned a blind eye toward jail staff’s sexual abuse of female inmates. Three jailers were fired, and two of them were prosecuted over the alleged acts.

Some in the community seem to have had enough of Staley. Earlier this year, a Change.org petition was launched, calling for his impeachment and prosecution. To date, it has 471 signatures.

Spencer, meanwhile, has attracted widespread public sympathy for his vigilante killing of Fosler. He might have a good chance of beating Staley in the March election — if he can avoid a felony conviction in the meantime.

The candidate filing period for the 2026 election cycle opens on Nov. 3 and closes Nov. 12.. From Jan. 26 through 30, Spencer will be on trial for second-degree murder. That means Spencer could be eligible to be sheriff at the time he files to run for the seat, but subsequently becomes ineligible to hold the office by the time of the election.

Spencer’s lawyers have also filed a longshot motion to dismiss the charges against Spencer, arguing that the Fifth Amendment of the Constitution requires charges to be brought by a grand jury and not simply by a prosecutor. That argument has been rejected multiple times in the past by Arkansas courts, however, so there’s not much reason to suspect it will work here.

If that motion is denied at the pre-trial hearing in December, the people of Lonoke County likely won’t know who they can vote for in the March sheriff’s election until the conclusion of Spencer’s trial in late January.
 
Was it actual kidnapping or was the dad just pissed he raised a slut and shot the guy? He'd be well within his rights to kill him in the former scenario, but the latter only justifies a brutal beating.
She was 13 at the time. There is no way she could possibly consent to be with him, much less be out of the house without knowledge of her parents in the middle of the night.
 
Was it actual kidnapping or was the dad just pissed he raised a slut and shot the guy? He'd be well within his rights to kill him in the former scenario, but the latter only justifies a brutal beating.

Daughter was 13, and this wasn't the first time sherrif McPedo did it, so even younger too.

He didn't deserve to be on this side of the ground, guy fixed that injustice. Should be given a hero's reward.

This isn't Muslimistan. It's not even London.
 
Daughter was 13, and this wasn't the first time sherrif McPedo did it, so even younger too.

He didn't deserve to be on this side of the ground, guy fixed that injustice. Should be given a hero's reward.

This isn't Muslimistan. It's not even London.
You kill people for stuff like murder and raping little kids, not because you failed as a parent and your teenager is running off with old dudes, he could've easily just beat him into a pulp and put him in prison instead of killing him.

Your post had a nonsensical premise.
It's plenty sensical.
 
You kill people for stuff like murder and raping little kids, not because you failed as a parent and your teenager is running off with old dudes, he could've easily just beat him into a pulp and put him in prison instead of killing him.


It's plenty sensical.
How did you get from any of the information provided that this man's 13 year old daughter was a hooer willingly running off with a 67 year old man?

How did you go from this
You should get a medal for killing kidnappers, that's crazy.
2 and a half months ago to where you're at now?
 
How did you get from any of the information provided that this man's 13 year old daughter was a hooer willingly running off with a 67 year old man?

How did you go from this

2 and a half months ago to where you're at now?
I almost never read beyond the headline or put much thought into my drive-by A&N posts, at the time I probably didn't question if it was really a kidnapping or not.
 
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