A Shelby resident used the council's public-comment period to make extended and detailed accusations against police and city employees, alleging withheld evidence, falsified reports and a continuing conspiracy that he said led to months in jail.
"I have been victimized by the corporation of Shelby for too many years," the resident, who identified himself as South Hall, said. He alleged that officers and city employees used his property "to terrorize me, set me up for prison for 10 months," that an officer arrived "with no evidence kit whatsoever" and removed items that he said destroyed fingerprint evidence, and that police reports were falsified. He named several individuals by first name in his remarks and said he had repeatedly tried to get copies of recorded interviews and other material.
The presiding official interrupted several times to remind the speaker of the rules against abusive or threatening language; specifically, the official instructed the speaker that calling someone a "Nazi" is not acceptable and asked him to continue without personal insults. The transcript records no formal response from police or city staff to the allegations during the meeting.
The council did not take action on the allegations during the session. The meeting moved on to committee reports and scheduled business after the public-comment period concluded.
Because the accusations concern individual conduct and potential criminal or disciplinary matters, they are recorded here as claims made during public comment. The transcript does not provide corroboration, a departmental response, or formal complaints taken on the record; those items were not present in the meeting record.