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The DEA Museum is closed due to the government shutdown and will resume operations once the government returns to normal operations. The Museum email, voicemail, and phone will not be regularly monitored during this time. For more information see the following official message from Department of Justice: "Democrats have shut down the government. Department of Justice websites are not currently regularly updated. Please refer to the Department of Justice’s contingency plan for more information."

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Spencer Stafford

Spencer Stafford

Agent

February 11, 1898 - February 07, 1935

Narcotics Inspector Spencer Stafford of the U.S. Department of the Treasury, Federal Bureau of Narcotics, was 36 years of age when he was shot and killed on February 7, 1935, in Post, Texas. Inspector Stafford was fatally wounded when Sheriff W. F. Cato fired at him with a machine gun as he exited a veterinary hospital. Charged with the murder were the sheriff; his deputy, Tom Morgan; and two local doctors, L. W. Kitchen, a veterinarian, and V. A. Hartman, a physician. In addition, both doctors were charged with federal narcotics violations.

Inspector Stafford, originally from Hudson, New York, joined the Internal Revenue Service's Narcotics Bureau after graduating from pharmacy school. At the time of his death, he had been assigned to the Fort Worth, Texas, office for three years. His previous assignments included tours in offices in New York, Georgia, and Florida. Inspector Stafford was described by Clyde O. Eastus, the Dallas District Attorney, as "one of the best officers I ever knew." Inspector Stafford's killers were charged under a statute enacted in May 1934, making it a federal offense to kill a federal officer in the line of duty. This was believed to be the first time this statute was invoked. Inspector Stafford was survived by his wife, C.M., who was described as his high school sweetheart; his parents; and one brother, Leveret.

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