An anguished trail of drug abuse, personal struggle and scrapes with the law ended for Robert T. Wilson late Monday after a traffic stop in Cottage Grove erupted into a life-and-death drama.
Wilson, 27, was shot to death by a police officer who was being dragged down a moonlit roadway off Hwy. 61. Wilson's wife, Jessica, and their 11-month-old son were in the car as he drove. Investigators are still piecing together the details, but Tim Clark, Jessica Wilson's stepfather, could see a violent end coming. The Wilsons had been living in the Clarks' Woodbury home for several months. "I knew they were going to catch him, and it was going to have something to with a crime. I'm not surprised at all," Clark said. "And it's sad."
At 11:51 p.m., Cottage Grove police officer Brad Petersen pulled over a car driven by Wilson in the 8200 block of Hadley Avenue near a senior housing complex, officials said. The vehicle, later discovered to be stolen, had been linked to the passing of counterfeit bills at Cottage Grove businesses on Sunday.
Wilson tried to flee the scene after being stopped, police said, but Petersen had somehow become entangled with the vehicle. After being dragged 560 feet, Petersen was able to get to his gun and shot Wilson. In the meantime, officer Shawn Ebeling, in a second squad car, was able to ram Wilson's vehicle, stopping it.
Wilson was critically wounded and taken to Regions Hospital in St. Paul, where he died. Petersen was treated for minor injuries, police said. Jessica Wilson, 27, and their infant son, Carter, were not physically hurt.
Robert Wilson's lengthy adult criminal record included convictions for drug possession, assault, theft and assault with a deadly weapon.
Despite knowing about Wilson's long criminal record, which included prison time, and his involvement with methamphetamines, Clark said he and his wife took the Wilsons into their Woodbury home in January 2009 when the couple, including an older daughter of Jessica's from a previous relationship, had nowhere else to turn.
At first, it seemed to go smoothly.