NBC Dallas-Fort Worth /

News

Terminally Ill Carjacking Victim: I Wasn't Ready to Die

Updated 9:02 AM CDT, Thu, Jan 8, 2009

Related Topics: Richard Allen Pratt

5 Comments   Post a comment Post a Comment

 

A Denton County man who is fighting cancer came face-to-face with his mortality when he was carjacked Tuesday.

Cancer Patient Questions Mortality After Carjacking

Watch Video

A man fighting cancer said he never questioned his mortality more than when he was recently carjacked.

Police said Wallace Eugene Judkins stopped Richard Allen Pratt in the street after he tried to burglarize Reding Ranch in Sanger.

"He said, 'Drive, or I'll kill you,'" Pratt said.

According to police, the homeowner called 911 when he came home and realized the door was kicked in. While the homeowner was talking to dispatchers, Judkins came outside armed with an assault he was stealing and a .45 caliber handgun, police said.

According to police, Judkins fired a shot into the windshield of the homeowner's truck and then ran into the street.

"He was waving frantically at me, tries to tell me that his father's been injured, and he needs help," Pratt said.

Pratt, 54, has been diagnosed with stage-four lung cancer.

"I'm taking chemotherapy treatments to buy as much time as I can," he said. "It's terminal."

Pratt said his instinct was to roll up the window and speed off, but his power windows have a device rolls them down, not up, if obstructed, enabling Judkins to force his way in.

"As the door opened up, he reaches beneath his shirt, pulls out a .45 automatic, jumps in the car and puts it up against the side of my head," Pratt said.

More than a dozen officers pursued the vehicle across part of northern Denton County. Pratt said he kept his feet on the gas and Judkins took the wheel for 20 miles.

"Every time we saw an officer, came to an intersection, (he said) 'If you stop, I'll kill you,'" Pratt said.

Police eventually forced the vehicle into a ditch at a mobile home park off Kings Row and Silverdome Road.

Pratt said Judkins stuffed the gun in Pratt's lap and jumped out of the car, pretending to be the victim when officers surrounded the car.

"I am in the car, with a .45 between my legs, my hands behind my head," Pratt said.

He said he took a boot to the ribs from an officer Judkins had swerved into and almost hit. But Pratt said he understands, because the officer didn't know who had done what until later.

Judkins has a long criminal history. He is being held in jail on suspicion of aggravated kidnapping and attempted murder.

Pratt said cancer has given him time to think about his mortality, but the carjacking has given him a story about cheating death.

"It will be something we can share, for a while, anyway," he said.

Comments (5)

Sort by: Most Recent | Oldest
  • WWHD Thursday, Jan 8 at 9:49 AM FLAG COMMENT wild bill (not sure if you are a baiter or not, but will comment anyway) so what were the cops supposed to do, sit back and see how it all plays out? What was the end result of the situation? Could Mr. Pratt have gotten out of it on his own without the officer's' help? Who knows who else could have been victimized by this POS. Thank goodness it is over.
  • WWHD Thursday, Jan 8 at 9:46 AM FLAG COMMENT How did the LEO know that he was "frail" and what exactly was going on? Mr. Pratt forgave him, so that is what is important AND the fact that his harrowing experience is over. Hopefully Judkins will never be out in the public ever again.
  • Concerned Thursday, Jan 8 at 9:29 AM FLAG COMMENT The police brutality should not be over looked. It doesn't matter if Mr. Pratt was a victim or the criminal, the police should not have kicked Mr. Pratt. I think that the officer should have severe consequences.
  • officer dave Thursday, Jan 8 at 9:09 AM FLAG COMMENT police were not abusing a crime victim, from Pratts own statement the scum who robbed him dumped the gun in his lap, so the cop was taking down an armed individual without shooting them. He is lucky, he could have been tasered or shot if an over zealous cop saw the gun first and took action.
  • Mr. Troll Thursday, Jan 8 at 1:54 AM FLAG COMMENT The victim is my son's stepfather. He is a good and honorable person who already had plenty to deal with without this. Now he has cracked ribs because a cop felt he had to "subdue" an obviously frail person, not to mention his time on the wrong end of a gun. They can fry this Judkins guy, as far as I'm concerned...

Post a Comment

Name


Comment - You have 2000 characters left

Enter both words below, separated by a space, in the field located to the lower right. Can't read the words below? Try different words or an audio captcha. What's this?