WEST PARIS — An armed confrontation between police and a local man was the result of a longstanding property dispute that boiled over Wednesday afternoon, according to the Oxford County Sheriff’s Office.

Neil Lanteigne

Neil Lanteigne, 43, fired shots and fled on a snowmobile and snowshoes after sheriff’s deputies arrived at the property at about 2:46 p.m. The deputies were sent to arrest him on a warrant for criminal trespassing and criminal threatening with a firearm.

During the four-hour pursuit through Lanteigne’s remote, wooded property, about a mile off Finn Road, Lanteigne fired shots.

James Urquhart, chief deputy of the Oxford County Sheriff’s Office, said officers could not immediately tell whether the shots were coming at them.

The confrontation was the result of a longstanding property dispute between neighbors stretching back to 2016.

The right-of-way issue escalated over the past three months, Urquhart said Thursday.

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“Mr. Lanteigne was approaching the neighbors in the area in question,” the chief deputy said. “As he was doing so, he was getting more aggressive and confrontational. Then, he ended up bringing what we later determined was a SKS assault rifle. Neighbors continuously complained about it, and we tried to intervene.” 

During the investigation, police discovered Lanteigne was convicted of a felony in Florida and was prohibited from owning a firearm.

On March 15, officers surrounded both access points to Lanteigne’s property and tried to negotiate with him. He barricaded himself in his house, and attempts to bring him out fell flat.

“He just didn’t want to have anything to do with it,” Urquhart said. “Instead of pushing or confronting the issue, we ended up pulling out of the area.” 

He said a number of factors contributed to the decision to halt the attempt to arrest Lanteigne. Among them, the remote geographic area of his property and the semi-automatic weapon.

“It was determined initially that we weren’t going to force the issue, cause a standoff and have a negative result,” Urquhart said. 

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Officers from the Sheriff’s Office, knowing they would be back on the property, parked two snowmobiles in the neighborhood, on Finn Road.  Over the course of the week, Lanteigne continued to fire his weapon from his home. Urquhart said police continued to make contact with Lanteigne through multiple phone calls and emails. Lanteigne, an amateur radio operator, made sporadic contact with deputies, wanting to discuss the issue, sometimes for an hour at a time, before going silent for days. 

At about 9:30 a.m. Wednesday, Lanteigne approached his neighbors with his semi-automatic weapon drawn. Later, he sent one of his dogs to attack his neighbor at the disputed property line.

“Mr. Lanteigne kept getting more and more provocative toward his neighbors, introducing more firearms and more taunting,” Urquhart said. “We knew it was escalating to a point where we couldn’t do nothing. We had to do something.” 

The dead end on Finn Road was shut down and residents of the two homes were placed on lockdown. Lanteigne was finally apprehended on his property, unharmed.

Lanteigne was beaten by a group of landowners a few years ago, suffering a broken eye socket, four broken ribs and a fractured vertebra after walking his dog on a road near his property on the boundary separating Paris and West Paris that he believed was maintained by the town.

“Lanteigne crossed over after being warned from the neighbors not to do so,” Urquhart said. “There was a physical assault. One of the neighbors was charged and pleaded guilty. During the incident itself, Mr. Lanteigne was physically assaulted and got treated and released from the hospital.” 

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Following that incident, the neighbors acquired a no-trespassing order against Lanteigne.

In early February, Lanteigne sent an email to the Paris Police Department, which he later forwarded to the Sun Journal, making a formal request the trespass notice “either be dismissed, terminated, or otherwise amended to allow me to use the road and the rangeways that cross through (the neighbors’) properties, so that I may access my properties.”

Included with his request was a property survey conducted by JKL Land Surveying and recorded Jan. 25, 2019, with the Oxford County Registry of Deeds.

According to Lanteigne, the survey shows he is within his right to exercise his dog and to access his property along the disputed property line.

According to a criminal history record, Lanteigne in 2016 was charged with two counts of criminal trespass. Both were dismissed.

The same year, he was found guilty of criminal mischief and disorderly conduct, stemming from a Jan. 4, 2013, incident, and was fined $200 for each charge.

According to Oxford County Jail Administrator Dana Dillingham, Lanteigne was arrested Wednesday on a no-bail warrant, and had yet to have bail set by a judge.

jbolduc@sunjournal.com

 


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