He used to tell people, 'If anybody ever touches my kid, I'll **** him.' I knew he wasn't kidding."
In February 1984, 11-year-old Jody Plauché was kidnapped and sexually-assaulted by his karate teacher, Jeff Doucet.
Stolen away from his Baton Rouge home and held prisoner in a California hotel room, he endured several days of horrific abuse before police tracked him and his kidnapper down and returned him safely to his dad, Gary Plauché. But Jody's ordeal wasn't over — and his father wanted revenge.
On March 16, 1984, Doucet was being walked through the Baton Rouge Metropolitan Airport to be handed over to Louisiana authorities. Gary Plauché, hiding behind sunglasses and a baseball cap, stood in wait, then suddenly stepped forward and shot Doucet in the head at point-blank range — all while local news cameras were rolling.
Plauché, a native of Baton Rouge, Louisiana, was separated from his wife, June, at the time of the shooting. He served as a sergeant in the United States Air Force and worked as a heavy equipment salesman.
During 1983 and 1984, his 11-year-old son Jody was taking karate lessons with an instructor, 25-year-old Jeffrey Doucet. Unbeknownst to Jody's parents, Doucet had been sexually abusing the boy for at least a year. On February 14, 1984, Doucet kidnapped Jody and took him to a motel in Anaheim, California, where he sexually assaulted and molested him. Jody, the focus of a nationwide search, was found after Doucet allowed the boy to place a collect call to his mother from the motel. California police raided the motel and arrested Doucet on February 29 without incident.
On March 1, 1984, Jody was returned to his family in Louisiana. In an interview with a news television crew, Plauché stated that after he heard reports that Doucet had sexually assaulted his son, he felt a sense of helplessness and did not know how to deal with the situation
On March 16, 1984, Doucet was flown back to Louisiana to face trial. He arrived at Baton Rouge Metropolitan Airport and was led in handcuffs by police officers through the airport at around 9:30 p.m., where Plauché was waiting for Doucet.
An employee of the local ABC affiliate, WBRZ-TV, had told Plauché when Doucet would be arriving at the airport. 81 A news crew from WBRZ was waiting for Doucet and had set up their cameras to record his arrival. Opposite the news crew was a bank of payphones, where Plauché waited while talking to his best friend on a telephone with his back turned. He wore a baseball cap and sunglasses so that no one would recognize him, and tracked the reflection of the camera lights on the wall as they panned toward him recording Doucet.
As Doucet was escorted through the airport, he passed the news crew who were taping the scene. He then walked past Plauché, who fired at the right side of Doucet's head at close range. Doucet fell to the floor, bleeding from a wound near his right ear. Plauché placed the telephone receiver down before a police officer restrained him and removed the gun from his hand as the other attended to Doucet. The officers who grabbed hold of Plauché recognized him. They kept him pinned against the bank of telephones, asking him, "Gary, why? Why, Gary?"The incident was captured on video. Doucet fell into a coma, and died the next day. Continue reading
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