Eric Watson was born on September 14, 1973. He graduated from the Tennessee Law Enforcement Training Academy, and received a B.A. and M.A. from Andersonville Theological Seminary in Camilla, Georgia. He also studied at the University of Tennessee at Martin. Watson worked as a deputy sheriff for the Marion County Sheriff's Office from 1995 to 1998. He joined the Bradley County Sheriff's Officein 1999 as a deputy. He resigned in October 2011 after he was the subject of an internal investigation into his time sheets. He also worked as an officer for the Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency from 2000 to 2005 and as a reserve volunteer detective for the Benton Police Department. Watson was first elected to the Tennessee House of Representatives in special election in January 2006 to replace Chris Newton, who resigned as part of Operation Tennessee Waltz. He was re-elected four times. He was an at-large representative at the 2008 Republican National Convention. In 2010, he received the Legislator of the Year by the County Officials Association of Tennessee. In November 2011, Speaker Beth Harwell appointed him to the Tennessee Criminal Justice Coordinating Council. On October 5, 2013, he announced his intentions to run for sheriff of Bradley County. He was elected in 2014, defeating incumbent Jim Ruth, and resigned from the Tennessee House the following August, upon taking office. In 2018, he ran for reelection, and lost to challenger Steve Lawson by 1,175 votes. He was succeeded by Lawson in September 2018.
Controversy
During a rally on June 8, 2006 at the Hamilton County Courthouse promoting the Tennessee Marriage Protection Amendment, which banned same sex marriage, Watson said "It’ll be a sad day when queers and lesbians are allowed to get married... and kiss in front of the courthouse." After receiving much criticism and condemnation for his use of the word "queer," Watson refused to apologize, claiming that he believed that "queer" was an appropriate and commonly used term for homosexuals. In June 2016, Bradley County Commissioner Dan Rawls handed over allegations and evidence of alleged improper and deceptive practices by Watson to the 10th Judicial District Attorney General Steve Crump's office, the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation, the FBI, and the U.S. Attorney's Office. Allegations of misconduct included the selling of a county owned surveillance van to a Nashville bail bondsman underpriced, using his patrol vehicle to transport his wife to the county jail to write bonds for prisoners, assigning deputies to investigate the activities of his wife's bail bonding coworkers, and abuse of county credit cards and funds. In late 2016, the Tennessee Department of Revenue began investigating claims that Watson's side used car sales exceeded the legal limit. In Tennessee, a dealer's license is required to sell more than five motor vehicles per year, and Watson had a salesman's license. In July 2017, Watson was arrested and charged with six felony counts of altering and falsifying the titles of six vehicles. His charges were dismissed in January 2018.