Tex McIver can ditch monitor worn since charged in wife's death

Claud “Tex” McIver and his wife Diane, are shown in undated family photos.Atlanta attorney Claud “Tex” McIver has said that he accidentally shot and killed his wife as they rode in their SUV near Piedmont Park in September. FAMILY PHOTO

Claud “Tex” McIver and his wife Diane, are shown in undated family photos.Atlanta attorney Claud “Tex” McIver has said that he accidentally shot and killed his wife as they rode in their SUV near Piedmont Park in September. FAMILY PHOTO

Atlanta attorney Claud “Tex” McIver can ditch the ankle monitor he’s been required to wear since he was charged with killing his wife, a Fulton County judge ruled Monday.

McIver, 74, can also have contact with employees at his Putnam County ranch and mutual friends he shared with his late wife after Judge Jaslovelin Lall agreed to modify the conditions of his bond.

McIver shot his wife, Diane, in the back with a .38-caliber revolver as the two rode in their SUV near Piedmont Park on the night of Sept. 25. Diane’s friend, Dani Jo Carter, who was driving the SUV, then rushed the three to Emory University Hospital, where Diane McIver died hours later.

In December, Tex McIver was arrested and charged with involuntary manslaughter, a felony, and reckless conduct. He is currently free on $200,000 bond.

As a condition of his bond, McIver was fitted with an ankle monitor and ordered to surrender his passport before leaving the Fulton County jail, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution previously reported. During his first court appearance, prosecutors argued McIver should not be allowed contact with employees of his ranch nor with colleagues and friends he shared with his wife, and the judge approved the stipulation.

In court Monday, McIver’s attorney Stephen Maples, asked for the bond conditions to be modified. The ankle monitor prohibited McIver from traveling for business or to visit his elderly mother in Texas, Maples argued, because he would not be able to clear airport security.

“He gets turned away,” Maples said. “He is not able to go through the airport.”

Prosecutors contend that with McIver’s intelligence and money, he could be a risk to flee, possibly from Texas into Mexico. Additionally, Atlanta police detective Darrin Smith testified that after Diane McIver’s death early Monday, her husband did not speak with police until Wednesday afternoon — more than two days later.

“I would liked to have talked to him that Monday,” Smith said.

Maples said that in the hours after his wife’s death, Tex McIver was also treated at Emory for a possible panic attack. McIver has said he was asleep prior to shooting his wife, who initially was alert. At Emory, doctors determined Diane McIver had extensive internal bleeding, and she died after surgery, Maples said.

Tex McIver attended Monday’s hearing but did not speak. He was wearing his wedding ring.