Former SBI Agent Albert Stout Honored Posthumously with Medal of Valor

5/17/2018
 
RALEIGH – The State Bureau of Investigation today posthumously awarded the Medal of Valor award to former SBI agent and Rowan County native Albert Stout, the victim of a 1974 car bombing who didn’t let his injuries keep him from working.

Eighteen family members including Stout’s sister, Sarah Lightner, attended the SBI’s annual awards ceremony at the SBI headquarters in Raleigh. Lightner accepted the award to a standing ovation.

Stout became an agent in 1972 and had been working undercover on a narcotics case in Rowan County. When he was getting into his Ford Torino outside his home on Sept. 10, 1974, a bomb exploded and Stout lost his right leg above the knee, his right eye, hearing in his right ear and partial use of his right hand. While bomb destroyed the Torino, Stout not only survived but was determined to keep working.

He spent several months in the hospital and when he recovered, he worked cases for another 19 years. In 1993, Stout retired from the SBI and became a liaison police officer for Livingstone College until 2006.  He died in 2016.

Lightner, a retired public school teacher, said their father taught them to keep on working and contributing.
A native of Rowan County, Stout served in the U.S. Army and received an honorable discharge in 1967. In 1969, he received a bachelor of arts degree from Livingstone College. He became the first African-American road deputy for the Rowan County Sheriff’s Office from 1969 to 1972.

The awards ceremony included commendations for community service, a partnership award for merit, commendations of merit, awards for excellence, meritorious service awards and the medal of valor award. Awards were handed out to 21 individuals or groups.
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