Former Loxley police chief Clifford Bradley Yetter, Jr., has been sentenced to two years of probation for multiple crimes related to his misuse and inappropriate access of confidential computer criminal records, the office of Alabama Attorney General Troy King said in a news release Wednesday.
Yetter, 64, was arrested in April 2008.
He was also fined $2,000 plus court costs and fees after he pleaded guilty to two counts of unauthorized use of a computer to obtain criminal records of individuals through the Law Enforcement Tactical System (LETS) under false pretenses.
Former Loxley Police Chief Sentenced


4 comments ↓
GOD is good.
Praise the LORD!
GOD is good.
Praise the LORD! I am so glad that this man is no longer the chief of police. He was a criminal and needs to be put in jail.
I think that people is his position, a position of authority, should be punished more for breaking the law than if it had been a common Joe off the street. A person that holds that type of authority knew better than to break the law. When you take an oath to uphold the law and then use that position to break the law, you should serve mandatory jail time regardless of the crime. He broke the law. He should go to jail. Period!
He should have been the locked up in the 80’s whe he first started child molestation. He actually had a conviction in the 60’s whe he took the 14 yr old off her bike. for lewd behavior. Where do these people do their back round checks. WALMART??????????????????????????????????????????
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