“I understand I’ve be the subject of all kinds of memes on social media – my voice, my looks, and everything else,’’ he said. “I learned a long time ago not to let that bother me. I’ve even been called Buford T. Justice.”
Make no mistake about it though, there’s a lot more to Singleton than his southern accent and his shiny badge.
The north Alabama native is a husband, father, grandfather, and former owner of a family barbecue restaurant and an ambulance service.
He builds model trains, toils in the garden, sang in a barbershop quartet and, perhaps most surprising, spent at least a decade as professional wrestler with the National Wrestling Alliance, where he even headlined a few main events as Dr. Death. His wrestling mask and boots are proudly displayed in his office…
Singleton said he’s not totally surprised that Vicky White took her only life.
“And probably having to spend several years, if not the rest of her life in prison, because she’s worked in a jail setting for 17 years and she knows what it’s like on the inside. So given those factors, I’m not totally surprised.”
“I’m angry at her right now,’’ he said. “During all this I didn’t like her, but I still loved her. "
“Knowing Vicky White and I’m just being totally honest, I don’t think the charges against her were as much of a concern to her as her having to come back here and face her family and her friends after pulling a stunt like this,’’ he said.
Lauderdale County Sheriff Rick Singleton, a former wrestler who owned a BBQ joint, says "when something bad happens ... I’m supposed to step up."
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