Stanley
Keith Guffey
1946-1987
Stanley
Keith Guffey was born in November of 1946 at Perryton, Texas. He joined
the Texas Department of Public Safety as a patrolman in 1968 and served
with distinction. In 1979 he was commissioned a Texas Ranger and his
duty stations included Company D in Laredo, Texas and Company F, in
Waco.
In January of 1987, Brent Albert Beeler, a
parolee from Houston wanted for forgery, made his way to Horseshoe Bay,
Texas. He kidnapped two-year-old Kara- Leigh Whitehead, daughter of
local rancher Bill Whitehead and his wife Leigh, and their maid, 22-year-old
Denise Johnson. Beeler barricaded himself in a house, killed Johnson,
and demanded $30,000 and a car to release Kara-Leigh Whitehead. Determined
not to let Beeler escape with the child, Texas Rangers Stanley Guffey
and John Aycock volunteered to hide in the back of a Lincoln Town Car
with the rear seat removed.
When the car was delivered, Beeler placed the
girl in the front seat and threw a briefcase with the money in the back.
In so doing he spotted Guffey, who identified himself as a Texas Ranger,
and ordered Beeler to surrender. In the seconds it took Guffey to identify
himself, Beeler fired a .44 Magnum revolver, fatally wounding Ranger
Guffey. Guffey was able to fire one shot before collapsing, but it missed
Beeler. Ranger Aycock returned fire through the car window, fatally
wounding Beeler. He quickly pulled Kara-Leigh Whitehead to the rear
of the car out of harms way before leaving the vehicle to approach Beeler.
Rangers Guffey and Aycock were later awarded
Department of Public Safety Commissioner's Medals of Valor for their
actions in saving Kara-Leigh Whitehead. The 70th Texas State Legislature
memorialized Stanley Guffey with a resolution recognizing his sacrifice.
More than 1,200 mourners attended Stanley Guffey's funeral.
Suggestions for further reading:
-
Vertical files, Texas Ranger Research Center,
Texas Ranger Hall of Fame and Museum, Waco, TX.
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