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Randy Lacy
CLAY CITY - Garry Randy Lacy, 55, 151 10th St, husband of Ruth
Garrett Lacy, died Wed, June 13th in the line of duty. He was born
Oct 28, 1951 in Winchester, to the late Granville Alexander and Zula
Belle Tipton Lacy. He was Clay City Chief of Police, a member of
Clay City First Church of God, member of Fraternal Order of Police,
and a member of Powell County Ministerial Association Anti-Drug Task
Force. Survivors include, wife of 27 years, Ruth Lacy, Clay City;
sons, Arthur Randle Lacy, Stanton, Brian Scott Lacy, Winchester, and
Kevin Dewyan Lacy, Clay City; brothers, Chester and wife, Bonnie
Lacy, Stanton, Garland, and wife, Sue Lacy, Clay City, and Ted and
wife, Teresa Lacy; grandchildren, Gary, Ryan, and Taylor Lacy.
Services Sun, June 17, 2007 2pm, Powell County High School
Gymnasium, Stanton by Rev. Garland Lacy. Visitation today and Sat,
5-9pm, Wells Funeral Home, Stanton. Burial in West Bend Cemetery.
Active Pallbearers serving: Greg Adams, Danny Rogers, Dallas Clark,
Jay Perkins, Kevin Neal, Rog Matthews, Denny Frazier, Danny Allen,
and Danny Thomas. Honorary Pallbearers serving: Brittany Adams,
Jonathan Adams, Members of Kentucky State Police, Stanton Police
Dept., Powell Co. Sheriffs Dept., Kentucky Motor Vehicle
Enforcement, Dispatch, Jail, Fire, Ambulance, Coroners Office, and
Forestry Service and Members of Clay City First Church of God.
Published in the Lexington Herald-Leader from 6/15/2007 - 6/16/2007.


Posted on Thu, Jun. 14, 2007
'The way he did his job was so right ...'
By Valarie Honeycutt Spears
VHONEYCUTT@HERALD-LEADER.COM
Come Christmastime, Clay City Police Chief Randy Lacy would pull on a Santa
Claus suit and take James Barnett's children a sack full of toys and food.
Lacy, 55, worried that the repeat offender's children "wouldn't get anything for
Christmas if we didn't take it to them," Powell Jailer Ted Lacy, the chief's
brother, said yesterday.
Lacy treated the man who would be accused of killing him in the same respectful
way he treated all of the people of Powell County in his 22-year-police career,
friends and family say.
"The way he did his job was so right ... from processing cases to dealing with
an irate teen," said Phillip Frazier, a Kentucky Vehicle Enforcement officer.
"He put on his uniform for one reason -- to help people."
Several members of Lacy's family followed him into law enforcement and say he
was the best possible role model.
Before Ted Lacy became Powell County jailer, he served with his brother on the
Stanton Police Department.
"He worried more about me than himself," Ted Lacy said.
Their older brother Chester also works at the jail.
Brother Garland Lacy is a court bailiff and a minister who rushed to the
shooting scene and, family members say, was with his brother when he died.
And Randy Lacy's son, Arthur "Little Randy" Lacy, is a Stanton police detective.
Ted Lacy said the family of officers were all familiar with Barnett, who has
been arrested more than 30 times on at least 59 counts of drug, alcohol, theft
and other charges.
Ted Lacy recalled that Randy Lacy personally had arrested Barnett as many as a
dozen times before yesterday.
Barnett threatened to kill Randy and other law enforcement officers more than
once in the past when he was high on alcohol or drugs, Ted Lacy said.
His brother took Barnett's threats seriously, Ted Lacy said, "but if he was
fearful, he didn't show it."
Ted's wife, Teresa, said the family lived under the constant fear that one of
their own might get hurt.
"We always prayed that a day like this would never come," she said.
The police chief was married to Ruthie Lacy and had three sons, Arthur, Kevin,
and Brian.
After graduating from Powell County High School, Randy Lacy worked as a truck
driver. He turned to police work in his mid-30s.
Lacy was the chief of police in Clay City twice, serving in that role for the
last three years. Lacy also worked at the Stanton Police Department twice, was a
detective at the Clark County Sheriff's Office and worked at the Powell County
Jail.
For the last two months, the chief was the only officer on the Clay City force,
and he responded to every call that he could.
"He knew that if he didn't go, there wouldn't be anybody to go," said Ted Lacy.
The city was hiring another officer but he hadn't started work yet, Ted Lacy
said.
Teresa Lacy described her brother-in-law as an officer who would work "two or
three shifts at a time."
"He was tough, but he had the biggest heart you could ever imagine," she said.
Lacy was a member of the group Powell County Christians Against Drugs, and he
played a big role in programs such as Shop With a Cop.
He raised money for the families of people he arrested because he knew they
needed help the worst.
"Randy did his job," said Frazier, "the way it was supposed to be done."
Reach Valarie Honeycutt Spears at (859) 231-3409.
© 2007 Kentucky.com and wire service sources. All Rights Reserved.
http://www.kentucky.com
   
   
   
  
 
Posted on Mon, Jun.
18, 2007
Hundreds gather to pay
respects
By Megan Boehnke
MBOEHNKE@HERALD-LEADER.COM
In a small clearing on a green Powell
County hillside, mourners stood silently at the edge of West Bend Cemetery
yesterday. On the road below, more than 200 police cruisers drove beneath a
50-foot American flag borne on the ladders of two firetrucks.
After the cruisers and other cars had
passed, a hearse arrived with the body of Clay City Police Chief Garry
"Randy" Lacy.
The hearse was preceded by a police
motorcade and a fleet of eight officers on horses. Bagpipe players and a
drummer announced the fallen officer's arrival at the burial site, as family
and friends held one another.
Officers fired a 21-gun salute for Lacy,
55, who was killed Wednesday while arresting James H. Barnett, 37, for driving
under the influence.
Lacy was shot in the head from the back
seat of the officer's cruiser. Barnett is being held on a murder charge.
Hundreds of mourners came to the cemetery
from the funeral at the Powell County High School gymnasium. Among them was
Robert Stokley, who had helped pin down Barnett at the scene of Lacy's death.
In the mid-1990s, Lacy arrested Stokley's
twin brother on a DUI charge, he said. A year later, when his brother died in
a car accident, Lacy attended the funeral.
"He came up to me at the funeral and
told me he was sorry for arresting him," Stokley said. "He didn't
have anything to be sorry for."
Now, 10 years later, Stokley was at his
friend's funeral. Attending made him feel better after several nights of being
unable to sleep, he said.
"You know there are other people here
who care," he said. "Everybody knew him well. He was an outgoing
person and he was nice to everybody."
Lacy's funeral drew a crowd of about
1,000, including law officers from as far north as Ohio and as far west as
Paducah.
Chester Lacy, the slain chief's brother,
opened the service with stories about Lacy's life, drawing occasional laughter
from the crowd. Their niece, Alicia Lacy, sang, and another brother, the Rev.
Garland Lacy, delivered a sermon.
"In police work, there is a call a
person feels they cannot get away from," Garland Lacy told the crowd.
"Chief Randy Lacy couldn't do anything else, though he was talented in
numerous other areas."
He said his brother was a licensed truck
driver when he died and was proficient in flooring, carpentry and mechanics.
"He could probably also put some of
these restaurants out of business because he was an excellent cook,"
Garland Lacy said.
Sara Combs, chief judge for the Kentucky
Court of Appeals, read a letter from U.S. Rep. Ben Chandler. She told the
family she had an American flag from Chandler that flew over the U.S. Capitol
on Wednesday.
She then spoke briefly about the day Lacy
died.
"I will always remember where I was
and the heartache we have all suffered," she said. "The commonwealth
of Kentucky now knows that well-kept secret we had in Powell County -- what a
great and moving man he was. ... "
"My prayer for you today is that this
story will never be repeated again in the commonwealth of Kentucky."
Garland Lacy concluded the funeral by
addressing the more than 300 police officers in attendance.
"If I ever need a cop, I hope ...
" he said before choking up twice. "Let me try again. I hope if I
ever need a cop, I hope one who shows up is like Randy. And I have a good
chance of having one show up like him because he trained a lot of you sitting
before me."
Randy Lacy leaves behind a wife of 27
years, Ruth Garrett Lacy; three sons, Arthur, Brian and Kevin; three brothers,
Garland, Chester and Ted; and three grandchildren.
Dozens of officers wiped their eyes as
Garland Lacy offered his family's blessings to them.
"In the past hours that have happened
since Randy was senselessly murdered, thank you from the bottom of our
hearts."
    
    
*****
  
  
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