Brian G. Fitch Sr. knew he was headed back to jail — and mostly likely to prison — if he was ever stopped for even a minor traffic infraction and police figured out his identity.
Shortly after noon Wednesday, when a Mendota Heights police officer stopped Fitch as he drove through West St. Paul, he had three active warrants for his arrest: One stemming from a conviction for a violent home burglary, one from a conviction for terroristic threats and assault and another from June, when he failed to appear at a court hearing on first-degree drug charges.
Now, in the aftermath of the shooting death Wednesday of Scott Patrick, the officer who stopped him, Fitch, a 39-year-old career criminal, will be facing new charges in both Dakota and Ramsey counties.
Dakota County Attorney Jim Backstrom and Ramsey County Attorney John Choi plan to hold a joint news conference at 2 p.m. Friday in Dakota County to announce charges against Fitch in Patrick's death and for his alleged shootout with officers in St. Paul Wednesday night in the minutes before his capture. The news conference will be held at the Dakota County Northern Service Center in West St. Paul.
The shooting of Patrick, 47, and the gunfight with police hours later, are the latest in a series of violent incidents involving Fitch that date back 15 years and include everything from assault and terrorist threats to kidnapping, court records show.
The state Department of Corrections said Thursday that Fitch served almost three years in prison, from 2000 to 2003, for a 1999 assault conviction. Sarah Latuseck, a corrections spokeswoman, said that in 2000, Fitch was convicted of escape. Details of those charges were not available Thursday.
Washington County Sheriff Bill Hutton was an Oakdale police captain when he arrested Fitch in August 2003 after a home invasion in that city. "I just remember it being a very aggressive call, very violent," Hutton said Thursday.
According to the criminal complaint, Fitch and another man and a woman burst into the home at 3:40 a.m. as the woman who owned the home slept in her bedroom. Her three children were asleep on the living room floor.