High Wycombe man who shot PC with crossbow jailed

BBC News Buckinghamshire
BBC News Buckinghamshire

A former computer worker who shot a policeman in the leg with a crossbow after officers were called to a neighbour dispute has been jailed for nine years.
Jason King, 55, of School Close, Downley, near High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire, admitted wounding after firing at PC Curtis Foster and stabbing a neighbour’s partner in the stomach on 10 May 2024.
The officer, who was hit by a bolt in the leg, made a full recovery and returned to duty. The stab victim also recovered.
At a crown court hearing in Amersham, Judge Jonathan Cooper said King posed a “significant” risk.

The court heard that after the incident, King, who has a history of mental health difficulties, had tried to “hide” in a wood but was followed and shot by an officer.
Judge Cooper was told that King had bought the crossbow online for less than £20.
The judge said evidence showed King had “armed himself” in the “event of need” and concluded that he posed a “significant” risk.
Judge Cooper said PC Foster and two other officers should be commended for bravery.
He told King he was “clearly beside yourself” with anger during the incident.
“You came out of your house to try and shoot at police officers,” the judge told King.
“You approached PC Foster and, from a crouching position, raised your crossbow and fired.
“From a distance of roughly two car lengths away, you shot him in the leg as he turned to run.”
PC Foster watched the sentencing hearing via an online link.
He told the judge, in a written victim impact statement, that the attack had affected him in “so many ways”.
“Previously, I guess I was quite blasé about work,” he said.
“I kind of thought risk is risk and that is what you deal with.
“Now I feel more cautious.”
PC Foster said he had suffered anxiety and had thought about how he might never have seen his “parents or anyone else” again.
He said physically his wound had healed but left a scar.
Barrister Graham Smith, prosecuting, told the judge that King had previous convictions – including a conviction for possessing a “bladed article” in a public place and for punching and threatening a neighbour.
He said King had hunted and stalked police during the incident – a witness used the word “tracking”.
Barrister Mark Kimsey, for King, said his client had a history of anxiety and depression, and cannabis use may have been an “aggravating factor”.
He said evidence showed that King thought he could “talk” to a neighbour’s dog and was “special in relation to having contact with an Egyptian goddess”.
Mr Kimsey said King wanted to apologise, felt “embarrassed and ashamed”, and “didn’t understand why he lost the plot”.
He said what King did was “totally out of character”.
He said King, who had worked “in computers”, had been on remand in custody since May 2024 and “doing extremely well”.