The Jefferson County District Attorney has issued an arrest warrant for youth evangelist Matt Pitt on charges of impersonating an officer.
According to a statement from Jefferson County Chief Deputy Randy Christian, on June 15, 2013 at about 6 p.m. deputies were called to the 5200 block of Falling Creek Lane to investigate a report of a man impersonating a law enforcement officer. It was reported a suspicious vehicle was sitting in front of a the residence about two hours earlier and the resident had seen people going back and forth between the vehicle and a nearby wooded area. The caller reported that he went to investigate and discovered a rifle hidden at the edge of the woods. The people he had seen were nowhere around the rifle. He then called the sheriff’s office to report the discovery of the weapon.
“While he was waiting, two men approached on ATV’s,” Christian said. “One of the men retrieved the weapon. The resident told them that he had called the sheriff’s office about the weapon and asked them what they were doing. Neither was able to provide a satisfactory answer. According to the witness, at this point the suspect that had retrieved the rifle presented himself as a law enforcement officer. The pair then drove off on the ATV’s. The witness did not speak to them further because he believed they were law enforcement officers. The suspect was later positively identified as Larry Mathew Pitt.”
“This case was forwarded to the Sheriff’s Office Criminal Division to be investigated,” Chistian said in the statement. “On August 14, 2013 detectives presented the case to the District Attorney and an arrest warrant was issued for 30 year old Larry Mathew Pitt for the charge of Impersonating a Peace Officer. Bond is set at $15,000. Sheriff’s officials attempted to notify the suspect of the outstanding warrant and the suspect was reported to be out of town. He is expected to surrender on this charge upon his return.”
Pitt was arrested in May on similar charges of impersonating a peace officer by the Calera Police Department. He pleaded guilty in Shelby County Court in September of 2012 to charges of impersonating a peace officer, a Class C felony in Alabama. He was originally sentenced to one year in jail, but that sentence has been reduced. Pitt is serving two years on unsupervised probation and was ordered to pay a $1,000 fine.
According to the Code of Alabama, a person commits the crime of impersonating a peace officer “if he falsely pretends to be a peace officer and does any act in that capacity.”
According to sources, at the time of the May arrest, Tyler Wilkerson, an on-air personality for WDJC and host of “The Ty Show,” which airs weeknights from 7 p.m. until midnight, was a passenger in Pitt’s vehicle. Calera police responded to a call saying that Pitt was flashing blue lights to pull over cars on Interstate 65.
According to a Calera Police Department statement, Calera police received a complaint Friday, May 11 at about 11:57 p.m. about an unmarked Chevrolet Tahoe on Interstate 65 pulling behind traffic and activating emergency flashing blue lights.
“The complainant said that once traffic began to pull over, the SUV would turn off the blue lights and speed around the traffic and that the vehicle had done this several times,” the statement said.
“Calera police officers stopped the suspect vehicle on I-65 in Calera,” records indicate. “When officers approached the vehicle, Matt Pitt held up his wallet displaying a badge and photo ID card. Officers asked Pitt if he was an officer and he stated he was a deputy with Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office. The vehicle Pitt was driving was not registered to any governmental agency, but was equipped with multiple working LED flashing blue lights in the fog lights, grill, front windshield and back window. The vehicle was also equipped with a working audible emergency siren. It was verified that Pitt was not a certified law enforcement officer. Pitt was arrested on scene for impersonating a peace officer and transported to the Shelby County Jail.”
Christian said at the time that Pitt had never been on the office’s roster as a reserve deputy. Christian said Pitt would “absolutely not” be authorized to identify himself as a deputy with the sheriff’s office or a law enforcement officer through the sheriff’s office.
Basement representatives have provided copies of an honorary Jefferson County Sheriff’s badge and a signed oath card presented to Pitt.
Christian said the honorary badge carries no authority.
“No authority what so ever and after the initial arrest where he pled guilty, surely he had a good understanding of that, Christian said. “There is no excuse for it to happen a second time. It’s sad and really hard to believe.”