Pete Johnson was climbing the stairs to Washington County's second-floor courtrooms in Stillwater when he heard a fight break out below him. Seconds later a man came running at full speed, yelling that he wouldn't let anyone take him to a mental hospital.
"I was mostly just stopping to see if anything happened," said Johnson, a 29-year-old assistant county attorney. "He kind of tore away from the deputies and started sprinting across the waiting area. He came running right by me. I jumped out and put a knee into his legs. I like to call it a takedown."
Incidents like this one, in January, happen without warning in the courthouse, no doubt the most combustible crossroads of humanity found anywhere in Washington County. The courthouse is a melting pot of the accused, the convicted and the violated; it's a stew of judges, juries, attorneys, victims and their families. It's a place where people in conflict mingle in close quarters. Tension runs high, and anyone can explode without warning — especially when being taken into custody.
"That's when people freak out, when somebody tells you, 'You're not going home today.' That's pretty serious," said Johnson, one of the newer prosecutors in County Attorney Pete Orput's office.
Law enforcement in the courthouse falls to the Sheriff's Office, which maintains a contingent of deputies and bailiffs who watch for trouble ranging from weapons smuggling and swearing at judges to anxiety disorders and heart attacks.
Courthouses these days aren't necessarily more violent, but the potential for violence is greater than ever, said Sgt. Tim Harris, who's in charge of security training for the court unit. In recent years, he said, more and more people enter the courthouse showing disrespect for the institution, requiring deputies to enforce rules of decorum.
"Now we have people showing up in flip flops, like they're going to the beach," said Cpl. Chanin Klontz.
Trouble anytime
The man fleeing deputies when Johnson intervened was Eric Paul Woodford, of North St. Paul, who subsequently was charged with three felony counts of assault, including two on peace officers and correctional employees. According to the complaint, he punched a Ramsey County deputy trying to handcuff him and threw a chair at Klontz, who broke his shoulder when he jumped out of the way. Woodford then sprinted down a long concourse toward exit doors.