Gainesville man arrested for firearm possession after shooting investigation
Staff report
GAINESVILLE, Fla. – Courtney Edward Crosby, 33, was arrested early this morning and charged with possession of a firearm by a convicted felon and resisting arrest after he approached Gainesville Police Department (GPD) officers during a shooting investigation, claiming to be the victim.
GPD officers responded to a call about a shooting at 1600 N. Main Street at about 10:15 p.m. last night, and one officer stopped a car and detained a suspect. Crosby arrived a short time later and reportedly said he was the victim of the shooting; he was reportedly behaving erratically and screaming and yelling. After an officer calmed him down, Crosby waited by his car at the Circle K at 1515 N. Main Street; the suspect who had been detained was in a patrol vehicle about 30 yards away from Crosby’s car.
At about 11 p.m., Crosby reportedly sprinted toward the patrol vehicle, making verbal threats against the man detained in the patrol vehicle. Crosby reportedly tried twice to open the doors of the patrol vehicle to get to the suspect inside, causing officers to take him to the ground and attempt to handcuff him. Crosby allegedly resisted attempts to handcuff him, and it took two officers to secure him in handcuffs.
After Crosby was handcuffed, officers learned that security footage reportedly showed he was one of the shooters. Alachua Chronicle has attempted to get more information about the shooting incident, but GPD has not yet provided the information.
At about that time, Crosby’s mother arrived to get items from the car for Crosby’s son, and an officer went to the car to help her. As the officer removed Walmart bags from the car, he checked with Crosby’s mother to see whether the items were for Crosby’s son; one bag held a pair of shoes, and when the officer lifted it to hand it to the woman, he reportedly saw a pistol inside one of the shoes.
The officer put the shoes and pistol back into the car and secured the car. He ran Crosby’s identification and learned that Crosby has two previous felony convictions and cannot possess firearms.
Crosby, an electrical contractor who has lived in Alachua County all his life, has two felony convictions (none violent) and five misdemeanor convictions (two violent). He served one state prison sentence for burglary of an occupied dwelling and was released in 2011. Judge Thomas Jaworski set bail at $60,000.
Articles about arrests are based on reports from law enforcement agencies. The charges listed are taken from the arrest report and/or court records and are only accusations. All suspects are innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.Â
Anyone? Anyone?
A bit strange…from my count, there’s been more arrests of felons with firearms than there have of non-felons recently. Just doesn’t fit the Democrat narrative but then again, we’re only a month in.
They’re still carrying, still committing crime…best be one of those people who are legally able to carry to protect yourself from people like this.
I’m liking the bail amounts on today’s AC criminals…
Wonder if there’s an election cycle coming?
Of course he needs a gun. He looks sassy.
Gilberto add trashy!
Of course. By sassy, I meant he looks like he has the emotional intelligence of a teenage girl.
Imagine if you called an electrician to do some work on your house and HE showed up! I wonder what company would even hire him?
Apparently this young man doesn’t understand the meaning of “thou shall have no gun” as part of his livelihood.
Don’t try that stuff in our small town.
Tell that to the McMichaels. The whole small town ratted them out when “armed robbery” shot himself trying to take their shotgun away.
Calling your mama at near midnight on a weeknight to come hide a gun for you, hidden in your kid’s shoes? Sad. Then again, she was the one who raised him (and named him).
Well….looks like his Mom came to try to hide the evidence from the Po Po. It’s sort of like a family affair. Learn to break the law early and Mom will be there to hide the evidence.