Officer suspended over tavern fight




MUNCIE — City police officer Bret Elam will be suspended for 10 days without pay and enter a diversion program in the wake of allegations he beat a man in a local tavern.
Madison County Prosecutor Rodney Cummings on Friday issued a report indicating he would not file criminal charges against Elam or ex-Muncie Police Chief Joe Winkle.
Cummings had been appointed to evaluate allegations that, in separate incidents, Elam and Winkle struck patrons at the Silo, 223 S. Walnut St., in the early morning hours of Dec. 9.
Both men were part of a group of revelers that left a Christmas Party that night at the eastside Fraternal Order of Police lodge and rode a bus to the downtown bar.
In his report, filed in Delaware Circuit Court 1, Cummings said his investigation determined the Silo was the site of “after-parties” for participants in two holiday gatherings, one originating at the FOP and the other for a local hair salon.
“The evidence suggests that most individuals in the respective parties, including most of the named witnesses and participants in the two conflicts under investigation at the Silo Bar, were heavily intoxicated,” Cummings wrote.
Cummings said there was “evidence to believe” Winkle struck a man in the tavern, inflicting a “minor injury to his left eye.”
But the Madison County prosecutor said he “developed serious reservations about the veracity and credibility” of Winkle’s accuser, saying the man became “confrontational, belligerent and accusatory” when questioned about inconsistencies in his accounts.
The man’s “hostility and lack of cooperation are so profound that I am so unwilling to call him as a witness in any proceeding that I have responsibility to prosecute,” Cummings wrote.
“Therefore, no charges will be filed against Joseph Winkle.”
After the incident involving Winkle, Cummings said, the former police chief left the tavern.
At that point, participants in the hair salon after-party “became angry, and confronted” Winkle’s son, Chase.
“A large angry crowd cornered Chase and his date in a very threatening manner,” the prosecutor said.
Elam came to the younger Winkle’s defense by confronting “the loudest and most outspoken member of the group confronting Chase Winkle,” according to the special prosecutor.
In an ensuing “physical struggle” with Elam, that man “sustained minor injuries to his lip, left ear, left eye and scalp.”
Cummins said his decision to allow Elam to enter into a diversion program — avoiding prosecution if he in no way harasses his alleged victim, or otherwise violates the law, for six months — was based on the officer’s lack of a prior criminal record and because “his actions were provoked by the alleged victim.”
Muncie Police Chief Steve Stewart said Friday that Cummings had contacted him and asked what internal sanctions Elam would likely face over the Silo incident.
Stewart said Elam’s 10-day suspension — which begins Monday — would have been imposed even if the special prosecutor had taken no action in the case.
Cummins was appointed to evaluate the incidents because Delaware County Prosecutor Jeffrey Arnold, who had also attended the earlier FOP party, was at the Silo that night.