LITTLETON, N.H. (AP) – The man who killed the gunman who had just fatally shot a police officer in Franconia last year is in trouble himself.
It started when Gregory Floyd and a neighbor ended up facing each other on a narrow road in Easton last month and ended with his neighbor reporting Floyd threatened to pull a gun on her. Floyd was charged with criminal threatening and ordered to stay away from the neighbor, Alma Jean Boisvert.
Floyd will be arraigned next Tuesday.
Last May, Floyd shot and killed Liko Kenney, also of Easton, after Kenney killed Franconia police Cpl. Bruce McKay at a traffic stop.
Boisvert reported encountering Floyd and his son on December 17 on a winding road with room for only one car at a time. She told police she did not want to back up a hill and around a curve, while the Floyds were on a straight part of the road and could back up more easily.
She said she asked the Floyds if they had reverse on their truck, then reported Floyd asked her the same and said he would not back up. She said he then asked if she wanted him to pull a gun on her. Floyd denies the threat.
Boisvert told police she told Floyd she didn’t want him to pull a gun because she knew he would use it, to which Floyd responded, “Because I wouldn’t miss, either.”
Police say that Floyd acknowledged the confrontation but denied threatening Boisvert. Police say he told them “She wasn’t worth the bullet.”
Eventually Floyd’s wife arrived and backed up the truck.
The next day Boisvert received a restraining order preventing the Floyds from coming near her.
“I am petrified of Gregory Floyd,” Boisvert wrote in her application for the order. “All of us for seven years have tried not to do anything to upset him.”
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