Military

Feds: Ex-Sheriff Stashed ‘Arsenal’ of Guns and Ammo, Says He Won’t Be Taken Alive

January 21, 2022Carl Prine
ex-sheriff

Ex-Greenup County Sheriff Keith Cooper, 68, began his law enforcement career in the Memphis Police Department in 1974. He served as the sheriff of the Kentucky county until retiring Dec. 31, 2018. Greenup County Sheriff’s Office photo.

An ex-sheriff from Kentucky squirreled away an “arsenal” of guns and ammo and has vowed to never be taken alive to face fraud and theft charges, according to federal prosecutors in Tennessee.


Ex-Greenup County Sheriff Keith Cooper, 68, has been indicted by a federal grand jury for allegedly stealing $50,000 in cash from a federal program between 2013 and early 2017. He also allegedly misappropriated roughly 35,000 rounds of ammo intended for his deputies’ firearms and misused vehicle and fuel funds for personal trips out of the Bluegrass State.


Following two decades as Greenup County’s sheriff, Cooper retired from his post on Dec. 31, 2018, and moved to Murfreesboro, Tennessee, according to his arrest warrant.


Guns and Ammo
Then-Greenup County Sheriff Keith Cooper holds a press conference in 2013 about a car theft ring. Greenup County Sheriff’s Office photo.

“Cooper has been aware of law enforcement scrutiny of his crimes for several years and has threatened, numerous times, that attempts to bring him to justice would result in armed conflict,” federal prosecutor Taylor J. Phillips wrote in a detention request filed Wednesday, Jan. 19, in Tennessee that cited the ex-sheriff’s “repeated threats of violence” against investigators.


“Furthermore, law enforcement officials believe that Cooper possesses the means to carry out these threats, having stashed away extensive ammunition and firearms during the course of his illegal schemes,” Phillips wrote.


Phillips said investigators had also “uncovered evidence that Cooper made personal use of a number of firearms seized by the Greenup County Sheriff’s Office.”


The federal probe into Cooper’s alleged corruption stemmed from a 2016 administrative audit by Kentucky state officials that detailed missing funds that were under the sheriff’s control.


Guns and Ammo
In 2015, then-Greenup County Sheriff Keith Cooper ordered “IN GOD WE TRUST” to be placed on his deputies’ cruisers. Today he’s wanted on federal theft and fraud charges. Greenup County Sheriff’s Office photo.

“During these inquiries, Cooper repeatedly told his subordinates that he would resort to violence to avoid consequences for his actions. For example, Cooper told different deputy sheriffs that he possessed an ‘arsenal’ and would not be taken alive, that he would kill whomever came to arrest him, that he would start a shootout requiring multiple body bags, and that he would never go to jail,” Phillips added.


Coffee or Die Magazine attempted to get Cooper’s take on this, but a telephone number previously linked to his Murfreesboro residence was disconnected, and he didn’t respond to an email message.


His federal public defender also didn’t respond to messages.


Although US Magistrate Judge Alistair E. Newbern in Nashville has slated an 11 a.m. detention hearing, Cooper is expected to stand trial in federal court in eastern Kentucky, according to the US Department of Justice.


Cooper faces up to 20 years behind bars for mail fraud and 10 years of imprisonment for the theft of public funds charge, plus a maximum fine of $250,000 for each count.


According to the Greenup County Sheriff’s Office, Cooper began his law enforcement career in the Memphis Police Department in 1974.


Read Next: Ex-Prison Guard Indicted for Slaying FBI Task Force Officer



Carl Prine
Carl Prine

Carl Prine is a former senior editor at Coffee or Die Magazine. He has worked at Navy Times, The San Diego Union-Tribune, and Pittsburgh Tribune-Review. He served in the Marine Corps and the Pennsylvania Army National Guard. His awards include the Joseph Galloway Award for Distinguished Reporting on the military, a first prize from Investigative Reporters & Editors, and the Combat Infantryman Badge.

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