Brock pleads guilty to firearm charge


Chaz Brock

Chaz B. Brock waived formal arraignment and reading of the charges and pleaded guilty to the charge of unlawful possession of a firearm April 22. According to a plea agreement Brock was sentenced to 4 years in the Missouri Department of Corrections. The term will be concurrent with all other sentences including the long-term drug treatment he is currently serving in connection with a Howell County charge.

The firearm charge is in connection with a November 2024 incident when officers attempted to execute an arrest warrant on another person at a camper on T Highway.

According to the filed probable cause statement, prepared by Ozark County Deputy Josh Sherman, when he and fellow Deputy Jeff Lane arrived, at the residence the door to the camper was opened with a sheet hanging over it. The officers knocked, and nobody responded. They entered the trailer to ensure the suspect they were there to arrest was not hiding from law enforcement, as that suspect had been designated as an absconder at that time. When they entered, they saw a single barrel Harrington & Richardson 20-gauge shotgun leaning against the wall. They also found four 20-gauge buckshot 2 3/4-inch Monarch cartridges. 

The officers cleared the residence, and no one was inside. 

The officers then spoke with a neighbor who lives on the same property and is referred to as a “mother figure” to Brock and his girlfriend. She said she hadn’t seen him in a few months or “since summer.” They told her they were going to stay on scene for a little while and may have some more questions for her. She reportedly came back a little while later and said that Brock would be coming home as soon as his girlfriend picked him up from his job in Arkansas. 

When they arrived, Brock was driving, although he does not have a valid driver’s license in Missouri, the report says. Sherman told them who they were looking for, and the woman reportedly said that the person was there about a month earlier but hadn’t been back as he said he was going to court to handle his warrants (which he clearly had not done). Sherman told the couple why he’d entered the home and that he had seen the shotgun sitting against the wall in plain sight. He said he knew both Brock and his girlfriend were being supervised by probation and parole, and therefore not allowed to have a firearm. He further said that Brock was a convicted felon, and not legally allowed to possess the gun. 

Brock said he was cleaning and fixing the shotgun for the neighbor and had it for a few days. When he was asked what needed to be fixed, he told the officers that the gun had “gunk” in the barrel, which caused issues ejecting rounds. Sherman handed the gun to Lane, who ejected the round easily without resistance. The officers noted they did not see the gunk that Brock was speaking about. 

Ozark County Times

504 Third Steet
PO Box 188
Gainesville, MO 65655

Phone: (417) 679-4641
Fax: (417) 679-3423