Rand Paul Awarded More Than $580K In Yard Dispute Attack

U.S. Sen. Rand Paul, left, talks with his wife Kelley Paul Wednesday, Jan. 30, 2019, during the final day of the civil trial involving Rand Paul and their neighbor Rene Boucher in Warren Circuit Court in Bowling Gree... U.S. Sen. Rand Paul, left, talks with his wife Kelley Paul Wednesday, Jan. 30, 2019, during the final day of the civil trial involving Rand Paul and their neighbor Rene Boucher in Warren Circuit Court in Bowling Green, Ky. Paul was awarded more than $580,000 in damages and medical expenses in his lawsuit against the neighbor who tackled him and broke several of his ribs in a dispute over lawn maintenance. (Bac Totrong/Daily News via AP) MORE LESS
Start your day with TPM.
Sign up for the Morning Memo newsletter

U.S. Sen. Rand Paul was awarded more than $580,000 in damages and medical expenses on Wednesday in his lawsuit against the neighbor who tackled him and broke several of his ribs in a dispute over lawn maintenance.

A jury in Bowling Green, Kentucky, deliberated less than two hours before delivering the award to the Republican lawmaker who had been attacked while doing yard work at his Kentucky home.

Paul had testified during the three-day trial that he feared for his life as he struggled to breathe after Rene Boucher, an anesthesiologist by trade, slammed into him in their upscale Bowling Green neighborhood in late 2017.

The jury awarded $375,000 in punitive damages and $200,000 for pain and suffering, plus $7,834 for medical expenses.

Afterward, Paul said in a statement that he hoped the verdict would send a “clear message that violence is not the answer — anytime, anywhere.”

Boucher’s attorney, Matt Baker, said they would appeal.

“We all expected that Sen. Paul would get a verdict in his favor,” Baker said. “This far exceeds anything that we were expecting.”

The trial included testimony from doctors as well as other who live in the neighborhood, but the most riveting testimony came from the longtime neighbors — Paul and Boucher. Paul, a former GOP presidential hopeful, told the jury Monday that immediately after the attack, “the thought crossed my mind that I may never get up from this lawn again.”

An apologetic Boucher acknowledged he wasn’t thinking rationally and called it “two minutes of my life I wish I could take back.” Paul showed no outward emotion, sitting between his lawyer and his wife in the courtroom, as Boucher recounted the attack.

In his lawsuit, Paul sought up to $500,000 in compensatory damages and up to $1 million in punitive damages. Baker conceded during the trial that a “reasonable award” might be in order for Paul’s pain and suffering but said no punitive damages should be awarded. Baker said that Paul had resumed his “customary lifestyle” that includes golf and a skiing excursion.

After the verdict, Baker said “multiple issues” will come up during their appeal. Asked if Boucher has the financial resources to pay the damages, the attorney replied: “We’re going to talk about that.”

Boucher has already served a 30-day prison sentence after pleading guilty to assaulting a member of Congress. Federal prosecutors have appealed, saying 21 months would have been appropriate. Boucher also paid a $10,000 fine and served 100 hours of community service in the criminal case.

Both Paul and Boucher recounted with great detail their accounts of the attack.

Paul testified that he got off his riding mower to pick up a stick and was straightening up when Boucher hit him from behind with such force that both flew through the air 5 or 10 feet (1.5 to 3 meters). He said he was wearing noise-canceling headphones and didn’t hear Boucher coming toward him.

For a moment, Paul said, he had a flashback to the 2017 shooting at a baseball field when members of Congress were practicing for a game. Rep. Steve Scalise of Louisiana suffered serious injuries in that shooting.

The attack in Paul’s yard was motivated by lawn care, not politics.

Boucher told the jury that he attacked Paul after watching the senator begin forming a brush pile near their property line.

The day before the attack, Boucher said, he had burned another brush pile that Paul had created near the boundary. He doused that pile with gasoline and set it on fire, Boucher said. An explosion burned his face, neck and arms, and Boucher said he was still in severe pain when he attacked Paul the next day. Boucher testified he had hauled away previous brush piles accumulated by Paul without asking the senator.

Boucher testified that he tried to talk to Paul about his lawn maintenance concerns, but was rebuffed. Paul maintained in his testimony that he kept any brush pile on his own property.

Paul said after the verdict that people can hold different views whether it’s on politics, religion or “day to day matters. It’s never OK to turn those disagreements into violent, aggressive behavior. I hope that’s the message from today.”

Latest News

Notable Replies

  1. Rand Paul Awarded More Than $580K In Yard Dispute Attack

    That’s because they didn’t have me in the jury.

  2. $200,000 for pain and suffering

    Ok, when can I open my lawsuit on Rand for all the pain and suffering he has caused us all?

  3. Well, at least Rand can now get a decent haircut.

  4. So this is about Paul being a douchebag neighbor who puts a pile of lawn trash at his property line repeatedly, pissing off his neighbor.

  5. I bet his neighbor thought it was worth every penny…

Continue the discussion at forums.talkingpointsmemo.com

32 more replies

Participants

Avatar for system1 Avatar for ajm Avatar for jcs Avatar for dwward Avatar for mondfledermaus Avatar for mattinpa Avatar for hassler Avatar for juliagrey Avatar for dont Avatar for callmeeric Avatar for sniffit Avatar for thebigragu Avatar for robcat2075 Avatar for musgrove Avatar for jeffrey Avatar for mrf Avatar for indyundecided Avatar for pine Avatar for benthere Avatar for jacksonhts Avatar for fraufeix Avatar for maximus Avatar for katex Avatar for haddockbranzini

Continue Discussion
Masthead Masthead
Founder & Editor-in-Chief:
Executive Editor:
Managing Editor:
Deputy Editor:
Editor at Large:
General Counsel:
Publisher:
Head of Product:
Director of Technology:
Associate Publisher:
Front End Developer:
Senior Designer: