A Frankfort man was jailed early Thursday after Franklin County Sheriff’s Office deputies said he strangled and threatened to kill his mother and disabled fiancée.
Deputies were called to a domestic dispute at a Bryant-Benson Road residence at 1:14 a.m. after a caller reported that 36-year-old Travis Fields was being violent and had a knife on him.
Travis Fields
When law enforcement arrived they allegedly heard Fields screaming at the females. They located him hiding in the attic and noted that he was “extremely intoxicated.”
According to his arrest citation, his fiancée said Fields went out to a night club with some friends and returned home “intoxicated and aggressive.” She also stated that he chased one of his friends out of the house with a knife.
Fields’ mother reported that she found her son on top of his fiancée with his hands around her neck. Deputies noted that the female had marks on her neck. She also told authorities that Fields threatened to kill her and both women claimed they are “extremely afraid” of him.
Fields is charged with second-degree strangulation, a Class D felony, and fourth-degree assault (domestic violence with minor injury) and third-degree terroristic threatening, both Class A misdemeanors.
He is lodged in the Franklin County Regional Jail on a $20,000 full-cash bond.
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State-Journal.com’s comments forum is for civil, constructive dialogue about news topics in our community, state, nation and world. We emphasize “civil” at a time when Americans, in the words of the current president, need to “turn down the temperature” of political debates. The State Journal will do its part by more carefully policing this forum. Here are some rules that all commenters must agree to follow:
Absolutely no attacks on other commenters, on guest columnists or on authors of letters to the editor. Our print and online opinion pages are sacred marketplaces of ideas where diverse viewpoints are welcome without fear of retribution. You may constructively critique the ideas and opinions of others, but name-calling, stereotyping and similar attacks are strictly prohibited.
Leeway will be given for criticism of elected officials and other public figures, but civility is essential. If you focus your criticism on ideas, opinions and viewpoints, you will be less likely to run afoul of our commenting rules.
Keep comments focused on the article or commentary in question. Don’t use an article about the Frankfort City Commission, for example, to rant about national politics.
Hyperpartisanship that suggests anyone on the other side of an issue or anyone in a particular particular party is evil is not welcome. If you believe that all Democrats are socialists intent on destroying America or that all Republicans are racists, there are lots of places on the internet for you to espouse those views. State-Journal.com is not one.
No sophomoric banter. This isn’t a third-grade classroom but rather a place for serious consumers of news to offer their reactions and opinions on news stories and published commentary.
No consumer complaints about individual businesses. If you’ve had a bad experience with a private business or organization, contact the Better Business Bureau or the government agency that regulates that business. If you believe the actions of a private business are newsworthy, contact us at news@state-journal.com and we will consider whether news coverage is merited.
Absolutely no jokes or comments about a person’s physical appearance.
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If you state facts that have not been previously reported by The State Journal, be sure to include the source of your information.
No attacks on State Journal staff members or contributing writers. We welcome questions about, and criticism of, our news stories and commentary but not of the writers who work tirelessly to keep their community informed. Corrections of inaccurate information in news stories should be sent to news@state-journal.com rather than posted in the comments section.