Flagler Beach cop to be sentenced Friday in road rage case


By Tony Holt

tony.holt@news-jrnl.com

PALM COAST — Jared Parkey’s SUV had been forced off the road by another motorist after he hurled a gallon-sized water jug at that person’s vehicle.
Parkey got out and walked toward the back of his SUV and saw Nathaniel David Juratovac aiming a gun at him.
Parkey extended his arms to the side to let Juratovac know he was unarmed.
Juratovac shot him twice in the chest.
That was the account Parkey gave to investigators with the St. Johns County Sheriff’s Office, according to court documents.
Juratovac, 41, is scheduled to be sentenced Friday afternoon in a St. Augustine courtroom. He pleaded no contest last month to one count of attempted manslaughter with a firearm. He faces up to 15 years in prison.
Parkey, a Flagler County firefighter, was released from the hospital the morning after the March 29, 2013, shooting along U.S. 1 in St. Augustine Shores.
Juratovac, a former Flagler Beach police officer, was arrested at the scene.
Each man had his wife and a child with him during the incident, deputies said. Juratovac’s wife, a St. Johns County deputy, was one of the witnesses who called 9-1-1.
The incident started when Juratovac “brake checked” Parkey because he thought he was following too closely, deputies said. Parkey responded by throwing a jug at Juratovac’s vehicle. The two SUVs collided and both vehicles swerved off the highway and stopped, according to the arrest reports.
The shooting took place seconds later, deputies said.
Juratovac originally was charged with attempted murder and Circuit Judge J. Michael Traynor denied bail following the defendant’s first request.
The defendant remained in a Clay County jail under protective custody.
Juratovac, his wife and his father all wrote to Traynor last spring asking for bail to be set. The judge would eventually set bail at $300,000. Juratovac posted it and was released after 84 days behind bars.
In his letter, Juratovac, a father to three daughters, pleaded with the judge to allow him to return to his family and his power-washing business, which he described as “operational, however struggling.”
In the same letter to the judge, Juratovac said after he resigned from his job as a police officer, he allowed his concealed weapons license to expire because he no longer chose to carry a weapon.
He also said business owners and others in the community would vouch for him and insist that his charges “are completely out of character” for him.
Juratovac stated his actions were “in response to numerous acts of violence presented upon me, my wife and our 4-year-old daughter.”
In the next sentence, he revealed his intentions to pray for Parkey’s recovery.
“He can now reflect upon that day and be with his family,” Juratovac stated in his letter.
He also conveyed his intention at the time to contest the allegations that were included in the charging affidavit. He entered his plea less than eight months later.
Juratovac resigned from the Flagler Beach Police Department in June 2008, one month after he stood trial on allegations of perjury. The judge in the case threw out the charge based on unreliable testimony from one of the prosecution’s witnesses
That case stemmed from his highly publicized arrest of Lisa Tanner, daughter of former State Attorney John Tanner.
In his letter to the judge, Juratovac pointed out the judge in that case described his actions as those of a “seasoned officer” and his former chief described his record as “exemplary.”
However, the chief at the time of Juratovac’s trial sent a letter to the then-city manager requesting that Juratovac be fired in spite of his acquittal.
That request was denied, but Juratovac agreed to resign.
Juratovac has declined interview requests while his case remains active.