Erin O. Patton, the former adjunct SMU professor who was arrested on Sept. 22, contacted The Daily Campus Tuesday to provide further information on the incident.
Patton, who was charged with evasion of arrest in a vehicle, attempted to flee from police and crashed into three cars in the process.
Upon arrest, Highland Park Police found a crack pipe in the vehicle he was driving.
Marty Neville, a public information officer for Highland Park, said that police originally approached the vehicle because Patton was “acting suspiciously,” though she would not elaborate.
In a statement to The Daily Campus, Patton said that Highland Park Police approached him while he was not operating the vehicle, and that the officers came toward him in a “slow moving SUV with its lights out,” and he did not realize that it was the police.
“I instinctively feared for my personal safety, and acted in haste to avoid a potentially harmful situation but did not intend to avoid law enforcement officers,” Patton said.
Neville said that because Patton subsequently struck three vehicles and continued to flee without stopping to report the accident, officers had legal cause to stop him.
Patton clarified to The Daily Campus that “the other cars involved in this accident were … parked at the time, so no one was hurt or placed in immediate danger. I received citations and paid a fine for these offenses.”
He also said that the vehicle he was driving at the time of the accident did not belong to him, nor did the contents of the vehicle, which included the crack pipe.
Neville confirmed that the vehicle was rented through Hertz Rent-a-Car.
Patton was charged with four offenses through the city of Highland Park: three for reckless damage for the cars he struck and one for possession of drug paraphernalia.
He took deferred adjudication for all offenses, which Neville said is “basically a plea of no contest.”
Patton will serve probation for the offenses and compensate the owners of the three vehicles for damages. Upon successful completion of probation, the charges will be removed from his record.
Patton will stand trial with Dallas County for the charge of evading arrest on Dec. 8.
Patton expressed “deep, heartfelt remorse and apology” to the SMU administration, faculty and students for the incident and thanked everyone who “has expressed their support and prayers” for him and his family.
“I am embracing this moment of adversity as a teachable moment for this instructor to further refine my character and deepen both my faith and spiritual conviction,” Patton said.
“It is also my hope that this serves as an instructive opportunity for all students to examine their choices, peer associations and broader impact our individual decisions have on others,” he said.
Patton’s full statement here: