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‘Uber patriotic’ Montana man in anthem attack thought he had order from Trump, lawyer says

Posted at 4:50 PM, Aug 08, 2019
and last updated 2019-08-08 16:50:24-04

SUPERIOR, Mont. – A man accused of assaulting a 13-year-old in Montana after the boy wouldn’t remove his hat during the national anthem thought he was carrying out Trump’s orders, his lawyer said.

Curt James Brockway, 39, was arrested and charged with felony assault on minor, according to an affidavit filed in district court in Mineral County Tuesday.

“Curt says he was given an order from commander in chief to make sure people are patriotic,” his attorney, Lance Jasper, said.

The incident happened on Saturday at the Mineral County Fairgrounds in the town of Superior after the boy responded rudely when the man asked him to take his hat off, according to court documents.

Brockway told police the boy was wearing a hat as the National Anthem began, and he asked him to remove it because it was disrespectful to wear during the anthem, but the boy responded by saying “f*** you,” according to the affidavit.

Brockway said he then grabbed the boy by his throat, lifted him into the air, before slamming the boy into the ground, the affidavit said.

According to the affidavit, witnesses of the alleged incident confirmed most of Brockway’s description of events, but one woman said she did not hear him ask the boy to take off his hat.

The child had blood coming from his ears, a concussion and a fractured skull, the affidavit said.

He was air lifted to Sacred Heart Children’s Hospital in Spokane, Washington, according to the document.

The child’s mother, Megan Keeler, told CNN affiliate KPAX that she received a phone call shortly after dropping off her son at the fairgrounds that he was being taken to a local hospital.

“Dude come up and grabbed him by his neck, picked him up and threw him to the ground head first,” Keeler told KPAX.

“There was no exchange — nothing! He targeted (her son) and took him down,” she added

What his attorney says

Jasper said his client has a severe traumatic brain injury and has problems with impulse control. Between that and being a disabled veteran who is “uber patriotic,” Jasper said Brockway is influenced by the rhetoric of President Donald Trump.

Referring to times the President has spoken out against athletes and others that kneel or protest during the National Anthem and when he suggested possible jail time or loss of citizenship for burning the American flag, Jasper said, “Curt takes that literally and views the president as the commander in chief and when he sees it happening, he feels he needs to do something about it.”

Jasper said Brockway expressed remorse the child was hurt.

“He told me ‘I guess I messed up because he got hurt. But I’m a patriot,'” Jasper said.

Brockway, who according to court records has one prior arrest in 2010 for felony assault with a weapon, was released Tuesday on his own recognizance, according to court documents.

He is due back in court on August 14, according to a statement from the Mineral County Sheriff’s Office.

The maximum sentence for felony assault on a minor, according to a charging document, is a $50,000 fine and five years in prison.

Jasper said he intends to present his client’s neuropsychological evaluation to the court and Brockway will plead not guilty.