![]() ![]() The three misdemeanor counts against Mihalski were dismissed in late November 2009, after he took a plea deal in an unrelated DWI case, court records show. ![]() Mihalski used “vulgar profanity” during calls with three different female police dispatchers and referred to the ‘Denny’s shooting,’ the January 2003 incident in which four SAPD officers were injured, two of them critically, and the suspect was killed during a shootout inside a Northeast Side Denny’s restaurant. New Braunfels after Mihalski was accused of continuously calling 911 and threatening to do harm to police officers, according to his arrest report. Three months earlier, in February 2009, Mihalski was arrested on a charge of abusive calls to 911, records show. Mihalski told officers that booked him that he hoped his mother, “gets killed by the devil himself, then burns in hell as a shishkabob with bell peppers on a stick.”Ĭourt records show both misdemeanor charges against Mihalski were dismissed in May 2009 after his mother quit cooperating with the investigation. Mihalski was then taken into custody on charges of family violence and making a terroristic threat against a family member, court records show. Officers noted an injury to the woman’s nose, that her glasses had been broken and that she had skin torn off from three or four different places on her arm. Portion of a 2007 SAPD arrest report of Mike Mihalski. The report goes on to state that Mihalski said he was feeling “twitchy,” like he wanted to hurt his mother. ![]() Inside the home, officers found Mihalski not wearing a shirt and shoes with disheveled hair and bloodshot and glassy eyes, yelling at another person, records show.Īccording to his arrest report, Mihalski looked at his mother and said he just wanted to run his fist through her mouth and see her brains, that she should, "take a very large caliber gun and blow her head off.” On scene, Mihalski’s mother told officers her son was destroying furniture and to be careful because he may reach for their guns. Summit after receiving an emergency call for a son tearing up the house, public records show. In November 2007, San Antonio police responded to a home in the 900 block of W. The chief of one of the departments who purchased rifles from Mihalski’s company said his agency would have gone in a different direction had they known about his criminal history. Invoices obtained by the KSAT 12 Defenders show that San Antonio-area law enforcement agencies have spent close to $100,000 with SOLGW on weapons and weapon parts over the past few years. Mihalski, who earlier this year acknowledged being a 35 percent owner of the South Side customized rifle manufacturer, frequently appears in social media posts for the company, which has more than 82,000 followers on Instagram alone. SAN ANTONIO – Months after several San Antonio law enforcement officers expressed concerns about their agencies being associated, Mike Mihalski, the co-owner of Sons of Liberty Gun Works, has admitted to a past history of physically clashing with and threatening San Antonio Police Department officers. ![]()
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