Former Farmington High School principal Chris Webb is prohibited from having any contact with his ex-wife and their two children for three months, according to a final order of protection signed Friday by Washington County Circuit Judge Mark Lindsay.
The order stipulates that Webb is not to have contact with ex-wife Dina Andrejcik, 41, and their two children, ages 12 and 10, until its effective date expires Nov. 4.
Webb, 42, was arrested July 19 after police say officers found him naked and bloody, assaulting his fiancé, Shannon Shrum, in their home.
Webb is prohibited from initiating any contact, including in person or through electronic, written or video communication, according to the order. He also cannot contact his ex-wife or their children through a third party, except through an attorney or by court order.
Webb was released on bond from the Washington County Detention Center last month, two hours after he was booked into the facility, according to the Washington County Sheriff’s Office website.
His bond was set at $5,000, according to the website. He has an arraignment hearing in Circuit Court on Aug. 20.
He was booked at 10:12 a.m. and released at 12:11 p.m.
He faces charges of aggravated assault, 3rd degree domestic battery, endangering the welfare of a minor, aggravated cruelty to an animal and resisting arrest.
Police approached the couple’s home shortly after midnight after Webb’s 12-year-old daughter called 911. Upon entering, officers saw blood on the floor, walls and stairs. When police entered an upstairs bathroom, they saw Webb naked and and bloody with Shrum in a choke hold, according to a report from the Farmington Police Department.
A dead dog lay in the bath tub, its throat slit. Officers also found a knife on the floor, the report states.
Webb was treated at Washington Regional Medical Center, then was admitted to Vista Health center in Fayetteville, according to a protective order petition. Vista Health provides mental health services.
A petition for a protective order filed by Webb’s ex-wife says Webb’s daughter witnessed the attack.
Emily Rappe with the Children’s Advocacy Center says anytime a child witnesses an event where harm was done to themselves or others that child could develop Post-traumatic Stress Disorder.
“Some of the symptoms of that would be signs of anger, withdrawal, or lack of sleep,” adds Rappe.
The petition was filed in Washington County Circuit Court by Webb’s ex-wife, Andrejcik. She said she believes she and her two children with Webb are in immediate danger of domestic abuse. The order was granted that day and was in effect until Aug. 6.
According to the petition, Andrejcik’s 12-year-old daughter called her mother from Webb’s home at 1:30 a.m.Thursday. She was crying hysterically and wanted her mom to pick her up.
When Andrejcik pulled up at Webb’s home about 10 minutes, her daughter was outside with police. Andrejcik asked if Webb was OK because the night before he’d gone to the emergency room, possibly due to a heart attack or stroke.
The girl told her mom Webb “went to jail because he killed Haus,” the family’s 13-week-old Labrador, and then assaulted Shrum. Webb “lost it and snapped” the girl said.
The petition says this is what happened:
Shrum and Webb had been lying in bed that evening when he began acting strange, “snapping his head to look at [Shrum] and talking with very big eyes. At one point, he jumped out of bed, grabbed his Bible and said, “This is a game, God, don’t you blink, there is going to be blood in this house tonight.”
Webb and Shrum went downstairs, where Shrum was trying to hide kitchen knives. Webb grabbed a knife anyway and began cutting the dog’s throat.
At this point, the daughter heard Shrum scream and came out of her room to find her father naked and covered in blood.
Webb had turned his attention back to the dog, which had retreated to the bathroom. He grabbed the bleeding animal and pushed its head under the water in the toilet, the petition says.
During the assault, Web was telling his daughter to stay with him and not to “blink,” while also saying, “Don’t stay with me; run as fast as you can,” according to the petition.
The girl said she called 911 once, but had to hang up because her father came into the room.
She saw Webb grab Shrum and drag her to the bathroom, where he was trying to poke her eyes out. The girl called 911 again.
Police arrived and found Webb and Shrum in the bathroom. Blood was on walls, floors, cabinets, countertops, furniture and the carpet.
Shrum told Andrejcik that police used a Taser on 6-foot-1 Webb, but it didn’t work.
Andrejcik said after police took the dead dog from the house, Shrum and her daughter seemed to be in shock. Shrum began cleaning up the mess, and Andrejcik grabbed a mop to help. She was there for three hours.
Andrejcik said Shrum apologized for what her daughter had witnessed. Shrum said she’d tried to get the girl to a neighbor’s home, which is where the younger brother was.
Rappe says once a child experiences a traumatic event the first step is to get them into therapy as soon as possible.
“Sometimes the child might think that if they saw something sooner they could’ve done something to prevent it so they might have sense of fault for the experience or sometime they`ll take that word trauma and turn it into something bad,” explains Rappe.
Shrum told Andrejcik that Webb was arrested and taken to jail in a straight jacket, but convinced police to take it off. When they did, he “went ballistic.”
Family and friends began arriving at the home around 4:30 a.m. Andrejcik left with her children.
Webb and Andrejcik were married in 1995 and divorced in 2004, according to the petition.