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Killer Had Stalked Doctor for Years

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Chocolic

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Nov 4, 2004, 12:47:16 AM11/4/04
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http://tennessean.com/local/archives/04/11/60816217.shtml?Element_ID=60816217
By SUE McCLURE
Staff Writer
COLUMBIA, Tenn. — As residents here grapple with a shocking
murder-suicide that occurred in a Belk department store parking lot
Monday night, two very different portraits are emerging of the victim
and her assailant.

Dr. Heather Elizabeth Bazzel, a promising young doctor who often used
her own money to buy medicine for patients who couldn't afford it,
charmed everyone with her wit and friendliness, friends said.

Her vivaciousness also attracted a quiet, soft-spoken former police
officer with a history of stalking women.

At 5:37 p.m. Monday, Miles Scribner, 54, of Indian Camp Springs Road,
approached Bazzel, 36, in the parking lot.
An argument ensued, probably because Bazzel had a court order of
protection against Scribner, and he was violating it by speaking to
her, according to Maury County Chief Deputy Ashley Brown.

Scribner pulled out a .38-caliber handgun and shot Bazzel several
times, then turned the gun on himself. He died on the scene. Bazzel
was taken by emergency medical helicopter to Vanderbilt University
Medical Center, where she died a short time later.

''Originally, he was a patient of hers,'' Brown said, ''but once he
got obsessed with her, she was terribly frightened of him and got the
order of protection.
''She didn't carry a gun, even though I had recommended it,'' Brown
said. ''She was just too kind and good to do that.''

Instead, Bazzel turned to the courts, filing a criminal stalking case
and a civil action to have Scribner involuntarily committed to a
mental hospital, according to Columbia attorney John Colley, the
court-appointed attorney for Scribner.

''He was taken to Nashville for a mental evaluation. Then the Middle
Tennessee Mental Health Institute sent him back to jail after three
days, saying he had no problems that couldn't be controlled with
medication,'' Colley said.

In all, Scribner spent three months in jail and was released April 14.

That's when the stalking of Bazzel began again.

''About a month ago, he put some flowers and a note on her car,''
Brown said. ''It wasn't a threatening note; it was a note of
affection.
''We sent that evidence to the crime lab, and the results haven't come
back yet.''

The murder-suicide is reminiscent of another recent tragedy that
jolted the Maury County community — the shooting of Freda Elliott and
her daughter, Rachel. Freda's ex-husband, Parker Ray Elliott, is
awaiting trial for the slayings. Freda Elliott, too, had obtained a
court order of protection, but authorities said it didn't stop her
ex-husband from breaking down the door of her Culleoka, Tenn., home
and terrorizing the family before killing Freda and Rachel.
Scribner's arrest history dates back to 1998, when Columbia police
arrested him on charges of possession of marijuana and driving on a
suspended license, jail records show. On Sept. 15, 1993, the Maury
County Sheriff's Department arrested Scribner on stalking charges
involving Bazzel. He made bail but failed to appear in court, so he
was arrested again.

''He served time in jail from Jan. 26, 2004, to April 15, 2004, on
this stalking case,'' said Sheriff's Department employee Linda Wray.
''When he was released, he was to have no contact with her or her
family, and he couldn't have a weapon.''

Scribner's trouble with the law dates back even further — to his time
with the Spring Hill Police Department. Scribner served on the
Columbia Police Department from 1977 to September 1985. His personnel
file shows he quit for ''personal reasons,'' according to Columbia
Police Detective Lt. Kenny Brady. In 1986 Scribner joined the
six-officer force in Spring Hill, Mayor Ray Williams said.

''He was terminated in the early 1990s for drinking on duty and
stalking a woman in town,'' Williams said. ''He even spray-painted
'Miles Loves whatever-her-name-was' on the Port Royal overpass on
Saturn Parkway.

''He supposedly received counseling, and he was hired back in 1995,
but then we had complaints from a female police officer that he was
calling and stalking her.
''He even left a condom on her vehicle.''

After Scribner was fired for the second time, he went to work as a
security guard at American Banknote in Columbia. Contacted at the
business yesterday, Sharon Cole of the human resources department said
the company would have no comment on Scribner's employment there.
Meanwhile, friends of Bazzel were trying to cope yesterday with her
violent death. ''She was a very high-energy, very positive person,''
said Edie Sutter, a patient of Bazzel's. ''I always enjoyed my
appointments with her because we'd sit and talk.

''She would also buy medicine for patients who didn't have the money
for it,'' Sutter said. ''That shows what kind of a person she was.''
Bazzel, who was board-certified in internal medicine, joined the
medical staff at Maury Regional Hospital in 1999.

She was active in hospital activities, serving on the medical staff
executive committee and as chairwoman of the medicine/pediatric peer
review committee in 2003 and 2004. She received her medical degree
from the University of South Alabama in Mobile. Her husband, Judd, is
a family practice physician in Columbia. They have no children. ''But
she has a farm full of animals,'' said Jennifer Graham, who worked on
community charity events with Bazzel. ''She loved her dogs. ''And she
was very active in the community,'' Graham said. ''She chaired our
benefit ball this year.'' ''She would raise money for handicapped
children and any and all causes,'' Chief Deputy Brown added. ''And she
bought medicine for people out of her own pocket.

''She was a beautiful person inside and outside.''

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Chocolic


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