Suspected sexual predator faces multiple charges in Pickens County

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He is a registered sex offender in Pickens County.

PICKENS COUNTY, Ga. — A Pickens County man is facing multiple charges after police said he had multiple reports of inappropriate sexual contact with minors. 

Jeremy Lee Remlinger was arrested Monday at his business located near the intersection of Georgia Highway 53 and Camp Road, Pickens authorities said. 

Remlinger is facing multiple charges including: Rape, Statutory Rape, Child Molestation, Enticing a Child for Indecent Purposes, Sexual Battery, Solicitation of Sodomy, False Imprisonment, and Computer or Electronic Pornography and Child Exploitation. 

Remlinger is a registered sex offender in Pickens County, according to authorities. 

Authorities also said that additional charges are expected as the investigation continues at this time. 

Source: https://www.11alive.com/article/news/crime/suspected-sexual-predator-faces-multiple-charges-in-pickens-county/85-b9b698f4-fe4c-4b87-9e81-f5d21870b199

Preacher, a registered sex offender, arrested on 500 counts of child porn

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Detectives served a search warrant at his home.

A minister and registered sex offender has been arrested on 500 counts of child pornography possession.

Charles Calvin Andrews, 66, of Englewood, was arrested Tuesday. Detectives first started investigating him after an IP address was linked to child porn downloads.

The Sarasota County Sheriff’s Office said detectives executed a search warrant at his home. They claim Andrews had downloaded more than 500 images to his computer, including at least 50 that investigators say depicted sexual battery of a child.

A probable cause affidavit filed in Sarasota County lists Andrews as a preacher at Osprey Church of Christ in Osprey, Fla. 10News attempted to reach the church twice by phone, but the line would not connect. We have contacted the church by email and will update this story if we get a response.

According to the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, Andrews is a registered sex offender with a prior sexual abuse conviction from 2006 in Alabama.

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Source: https://www.wtsp.com/article/news/preacher-a-registered-sex-offender-arrested-on-500-counts-of-child-porn/67-f939fe30-3f0c-4da3-b4be-f097ea212117

Labor Secretary Acosta resigning amid Epstein deal scrutiny

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WASHINGTON (AP) — Labor Secretary Alexander Acosta said Friday he is resigning following renewed scrutiny of his handling of a 2008 secret plea deal with wealthy financier Jeffrey Esptein, who is accused of sexually abusing dozens of underage girls.

President Donald Trump, with Acosta at his side, made the announcement as he left the White House for a trip to Wisconsin and Ohio. The president said Acosta had been a “great” labor secretary.

“I hate to see this happen,” Trump said. He said he did not ask Acosta to leave the Cabinet.

Acosta said his resignation would be effective in seven days. Acosta said he didn’t think it was right for his handling of Epstein’s case to distract from his work as secretary of labor.

“My point here today is we have an amazing economy and the focus needs to be on the economy job creation,” Acosta said.

Acosta was the U.S. attorney in Miami when he oversaw a 2008 non-prosecution agreement Jeffrey Epstein. Epstein avoided federal charges, plead guilty to state charges and served 13 months in jail. Similar charges recently filed against Epstein by federal prosecutors in New York had put Acosta’s role in the 2008 deal under renewed scrutiny.

Top Democratic lawmakers and presidential candidates had demanded that Acosta resign over his handling of the agreement, which a federal judge has said violated federal law because Acosta did not notify Epstein’s victims of the arrangement. The Justice Department has been investigating.

Trump had initially defended Acosta but said he’d look “very closely” his handling of the 2008 agreement.

The deal came under scrutiny earlier this year following reporting by the Miami Herald.

Epstein, 66, reached the deal to secretly end a federal sex abuse investigation involving at least 40 teenage girls that could have landed him behind bars for life. He instead pleaded guilty to state charges, spent 13 months in jail, paid settlements to victims and is a registered sex offender.

Acosta had attempted to clear his name, and held a news conference — encouraged by Trump — to defend his actions. In a 50-plus-minute lawyerly rebuttal, Acosta argued his office had secured the best deal it could at the time and was working in the victims’ best interests.

“We did what we did because we wanted to see Epstein go to jail,” he said, refusing to apologize for his actions. “We believe that we proceeded appropriately.”

Pressed on whether he had any regrets, Acosta repeatedly suggested that circumstances had changed since then.

“We now have 12 years of knowledge and hindsight and we live in a very different world,” he said. “Today’s world treats victims very, very differently,” he said.

After federal attorneys in New York announced the new charges against Epstein this week, Acosta tweeted that he was “pleased” by their decision.

“The crimes committed by Epstein are horrific,” Acosta tweeted. “With the evidence available more than a decade ago, federal prosecutors insisted that Epstein go to jail, register as a sex offender and put the world on notice that he was a sexual predator.”

“Now that new evidence and additional testimony is available, the NY prosecution offers an important opportunity to more fully bring him to justice,” he said.

Acosta, the nation’s 27th labor secretary, took on the role officially in early 2017, leading a sprawling agency that enforces more than 180 federal laws covering about 10 million employers and 125 million workers. He was confirmed in the Senate 60-38.

But Acosta had frustrated some conservatives who had been pushing for his ouster long before the Epstein uproar. Among their frustrations were Acosta’s decisions to proceed with several employment discrimination lawsuits and to allow certain Obama holdovers to remain on the job.

Acosta is a former federal prosecutor and civil rights chief. Before joining the administration he was dean of the Florida International University law school.

Source: https://www.unionrecorder.com/news/labor-secretary-acosta-resigning-amid-epstein-deal-scrutiny/article_bc61ef7e-a4bb-11e9-be69-2b5cc37b004a.html

Two houses, motor home burn over weekend

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MOULTRIE, Ga. — Colquitt County firefighters responded to two house fires and a motor home fire in three separate incidents over the weekend.

Colquitt County Sheriff’s Office reports did not indicate injuries in any of the incidents.

About 10 a.m. Saturday, Mitchell Hulett, 3018 Ellenton-Omega Road, took his dogs on an ATV ride to a nearby creek. When he came home about an hour later, he found his house on fire, according to the sheriff’s office report.

The deputy said volunteer firefighters were working the fire when he arrived and later told him the cause appeared to be an electrical issue in the attic.

In the second incident, a mobile home belonging to Essie Mae Dennis burned at 526 Selena Drive about 9:30 a.m. Sunday. When the deputy arrived, the residence was engulfed in flames, the CCSO report said.

A 2005 Chevrolet Impala parked near the house was also damaged, the deputy said.

Only an hour later — 10:37 a.m. Sunday — a motor home caught fire in front of Publix Supermarket, 378 N. Veterans Parkway.

David Goshorn, of Largo, Fla., the driver of the motor home, told the responding deputy he was stopped at a traffic light at Fourth Avenue Northeast and Veterans Parkway when he heard a pop and immediately smelled gasoline. He said he pulled the vehicle over and stopped as quickly as he could. A few moments later, the vehicle was on fire.

Those fires came a little over a week after another house fire that was originally suspected to be arson.

Grady Lee Wilson lived at the residence, 3798 Cool Springs Road, Norman Park, when it burned early on the morning of June 28.

The sheriff’s department report did not say why the fire was thought to be arson, and due in part to the holiday, The Observer was unable to make contact with the investigator working the case, Chris Robinson, until Monday.

On Monday, Robinson said the investigation is continuing, but the fire is looking more like an accident.

Robinson said Wilson is in jail in Florida, where he moved immediately after his house burned. He is a registered sex offender, according to both Robinson and sheriff’s office reports; Robinson said when he moved to Florida he did not register with local authorities.

Wilson will face questioning about the fire when Florida authorities return him here, Robinson said, after which the investigator hopes to be able to close the case.

Jeannette Farmer Eady, 74, passed away Tuesday, May 19, 2020. Graveside services will be held at 2 p.m. Thursday, May 21, at Nunn-Wheeler Cemetery with the Rev. Freddie Hogg officiating. Mrs. Eady was born in Milledgeville and was a graduate of Baldwin County High School. She worked for Dr. …

Grady Ray Townsend (Pop) of Oxford, passed away Friday, May 15, 2020, at the age of 89. A Marine, Mr. Townsend valiantly served his country in the United States Marine Corps during the Korean War and was a faithful member of Heritage Hills Baptist Church. He was a hardworking, selfless man w…

Benjie Dewayne Fountain, 58, passed away Thursday, May 15, 2020. Private services will be held at West View Cemetery. Benjie was a life-long resident of Baldwin County. He was a retired electrician. He was preceded in death by his father, James E. Fountain; and two brothers, Eddie Fountain a…

A private burial service for Mrs. Lois Gilbert of Sparta, Ga., will be held for family. Her memories shall forever remain in the heart of her children, Johnnie Gilbert, Jennie Rous, Brenda Gilbert, Polly Wheeler, Eddie Gilbert, Bobby Gilbert, Deborah Gilbert, Timmy Gilbert, Trudy Butt and Ro…

Funeal services for Mrs. Evelyn R. Abram of Sparta, Ga., will be held privately with family. Her memories will be cherished by her children, Timothy Duggans, Charles Duggans, Kathy Harper, Lucious Abrams, Reva Williams and Vanessa Cheathem. Services entrusted to Dawson’s Mortuary, 98 Hopgood…

Source: https://www.unionrecorder.com/news/ga_fl_news/two-houses-motor-home-burn-over-weekend/article_b8e0f398-291f-5ddb-b544-617830205b2f.html

Sex offender arrested for Coffee Co. probation violation

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Sex offender arrested for Coffee Co. probation violation

(Coffee Co. Sheriff)

By WALB News Team | June 26, 2019 at 10:43 AM EDT – Updated June 26 at 10:43 AM

DOUGLAS, Ga. (WALB) – On June 14, Coffee County Sheriff’s Office Detectives arrested Tyrone Lamar Alexander after an investigation revealed that Alexander had failed to report information required by his status as a sex offender to the Coffee County Sheriff’s Office.

Alexander is required to keep his address, employment information and other information, such as phone numbers of any phone he has. Alexander had moved from his last address and did not report that move to the Coffee County Sheriff’s Office prior to moving as required by law. He did not report address change even after moving.

Alexander had been working for a company in Douglas since December of 2018 and had failed to report that information, according to the sheriff’s office. The address that Alexander moved to was too close to a church.

Alexander was arrested and transported to the Coffee County Jail, charged with failure to report address change, failure to report employment and probation violation.

Copyright 2019 WALB. All rights reserved.

Source: https://www.walb.com/2019/06/26/sex-offender-arrested-coffee-co-probation-violation/

Community stunned by ice cream shop owner’s sex offender status

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GAINESVILLE, Ga. (CBS46) — The people of Gainesville speak of the local ice-cream shop owner as a confident man who loved getting involved with events around town.

“He was the head of a coalition around here so he was very involved with the square,” said Jamie, a father of one and Gainesville resident.

“He seemed like a very sweet caring person, a little eccentric, a little,umm a little flamboyant maybe even,” said Ashley Brown who works in the same complex that houses the ice cream shop.

The owner of the ice cream shop Endrick Torres was arrested on June 18 by Gainesville police for violating Georgia sex offender laws.

“An alarming situation that you have a registered sex offender operating a doughnut and ice cream shop in downtown which is going to bring children in.”

Police said Torres has operated the store for roughly six months. They found he had given a false name on the lease agreement to the property owners and has also been charged with forgery.

Torres has a long history of sex offending against minors dating back to 2014 starting in New York.

Ashley Brown spoke with him regularly, and said he was quite open on the topics he would chat about.

“He didn’t seem like he would hurt anybody, like I mean he was kind of sexual. I’m starting to think now also maybe he was talking to me because I look younger than I am,” she said.

Miss Brown also said he would often host events at the ice cream store for kids.

“He would host children’s parties, for the children’s party planner that’s in there.”

Gainesville parents are still coming to terms with just who they were dealing with.

“I mean he opened an ice-cream shop, like I told you, my daughter went in there, she got an ice-cream and I’m like, it’s just shocking man,” said Jamie

Gainesville police said they know of at least three different alias Torres has used on social media and to falsify documents.

Source: https://www.cbs46.com/news/community-stunned-by-ice-cream-shop-owners-sex-offender-status/article_16c35c62-930c-11e9-9d76-5f34a1dd8efe.html

Convicted sex offender arrested for operating ice cream and donut shop near children

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GAINESVILLE, Ga. (CBS46) — A Barrow County man is behind bars after being arrested during an active investigation of a sex offender in Gainesville.

Endrick Torres, 39, was arrested on charges related to “violating the Georgia Sex Offender Law.” According to police, he maintained Love Is All You Knead, an ice cream and donut shop, within 1,000 ft. of a child learning facility/ area where minors congregate.

Torres allegedly operated the business under a fake name. As a result, he was also charged with forgery.

He is currently being held at Hall County Jail.

Copyright 2019 WGCL-TV (Meredith Corporation). All rights reserved.

Source: https://www.cbs46.com/news/convicted-sex-offender-arrested-for-operating-ice-cream-and-donut-shop-near-children/article_6184003c-9242-11e9-8dc9-d34bec35dfb9.html

Why the nation’s two largest religious groups are talking about sex abuse this week

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(CNN) — When leaders of the country’s two largest religious groups — the Catholic Church and Southern Baptist Convention — hold meetings this week, the separate conferences will have a common agenda: clergy sexual abuse.

The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, which represents some 51 million American Catholics, will hold their four-day spring meeting in Baltimore starting Tuesday. Meanwhile the Southern Baptist Convention, which counts some 15 million members, kicks off their annual meeting Tuesday in Birmingham, Alabama.

After a series of internal investigations and journalistic exposes, both denominations are reeling from scandals that have stained their reputations and demoralized the faithful.

“The cumulative effect of all the scandals does weigh very heavy on your soul,” said John Gehring, Catholic program director at the Washington-based group Faith in Public Life.

“For many of us, it is getting increasingly hard to keep faith in the institution itself.”

Gehring is far from alone in questioning the Catholic Church. A Gallup poll released in March found that more than 1 in 3 American Catholics say they have thought about leaving the fold because of the clergy sex abuse scandal.

Neither are Catholics alone in seeing their spiritual leaders commit or cover up heinous crimes, said Russell Moore, president of the Southern Baptists’ Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission.

“Several years ago when I would raise this issue there was a sense of invulnerability,” said Moore. “A church member might say that clergy abuse is a Catholic problem, or that it never happens in his church. I very rarely hear that now.”

That’s after Houston Chronicle and the San Antonio Express-News published a series of shocking reports about abuse in Southern Baptist circles. About 380 Southern Baptist leaders and volunteers have faced allegations of sexual misconduct, according to the two Texas newspapers, which also found that in the past 20 years, more than 700 victims have been abused, with some urged to have abortions and forgive their abusers.

On Friday, leaders of the Southern Baptist Convention released a 52-page report about abuse in the denomination, including survivors’ stories and mea culpas about mistakes church leaders have made.

“We lament the fact that it took a national movement of reckoning for abuse to force us to take this issue seriously in our own convention,” reads the report, conducted by advisors to SBC President Pastor J.D. Greear.

“It should now be obvious that the problem has been and still is more widespread than anyone has realized,” the report continues, “affecting our congregations all over the country, from the smallest church pastored by a bi-vocational minister to the megachurch with hundreds on staff.”

For both the Catholic bishops and Southern Baptists, the debate will likely center on the tension between autonomy and accountability. Traditionally, bishops and Baptists pastors have been allowed to operate in isolation, free from oversight. In the wake of these sex scandals, many of the faithful are now demanding change.

Bishops in Baltimore: Seeking more accountability

The goal for the Catholic bishops in Baltimore, is, simply stated, is to stanch the bleeding. The church spent much of 2018 suffering through a morass of scandals and this year hasn’t been much easier.

In recent weeks, an internal report revealed that the US Catholic Church had spent more than $300 million on abuse-related costs from June 2017-June 2018, even before the latest iterations of the scandal escalated last summer.

On June 5, the AP published an expose accusing Houston’s Cardinal Daniel DiNardo, president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, of mishandling an abuse case involving an adult. DiNardo has vigorously denied the charges.

DiNardo, who suffered a stroke in March, has also faced accusations that he mishandled another clergy abuse case. Last November, police raided the cardinal’s Houston headquarters, looking for “secret archives” related to a priest who has been accused of sexually abusing children. DiNardo has denied wrongdoing in that case as well.

“It is very hard to see how the conference can continue this way, with a president who is even worse than a lame duck,” said Massimo Faggioli, a church historian at Villanova University in Pennsylvania. “The credibility of the US bishops is in freefall, which can only be stopped by a visible change in leadership.”

A spokesman for DiNardo denied an interview request.

The bishops’ reputations took another hit last week when an internal church report obtained by the Washington Post accused West Virginia’s former bishop of sexually harassing young priests and spending hundreds of thousands of dollars on luxury items and gifts to powerful clerics. Bishop Michael Bransfield, who was removed from ministry last March, denied the accusations, saying he looks forward to his Vatican trial.

Even the Bransfield report was stained by scandal.

Baltimore’s Archbishop William Lori, who led the investigation into Bransfield under a new church model to oversee bishops, apologized for editing the report to omit the fact that he and other bishops had received tens of thousands of dollars as gifts from Bransfield. He pledged to return $7,500 to West Virginia Catholic charities.

“If I had to do it over again, especially at a time when we are trying to create greater accountability and transparency, the report would’ve included the names of those bishops who received gifts, including my own,” Lori said in a video statement.

At their semi-annual meeting in Baltimore, accountability for bishops is expected to dominate the agenda.

Traditionally, bishops have held a great deal of autonomy in their diocese, with only the Pope providing oversight. But the bishops are expected to debate several proposals to add new layers of accountability. The bishops had originally planned to take up these proposals last November, before the Vatican asked them to wait for further guidance.

That guidance finally arrived in May, when Pope Francis issued new, churchwide rules for reporting abuse in the Catholic Church. Among other things, those rules require bishops around the world to adopt new measures to hold one another accountable.

In Baltimore, the bishops are expected to debate several proposals to do just that: a third-party system to report abuse or misconduct by bishops; a way for bishops to investigate those reports; a new policy to discipline bishops who have already retired or been removed from ministry; and finally, a promise to hold themselves accountable.

But some already say the proposals will not satisfy Catholics eager to see their bishops held accountable, especially since the bishops themselves will be running the investigations.

“I don’t see how that’s going to satisfy the laity,” said Francesco Cesareo, chair of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops National Review Board.

Baptists in Birmingham: Fighting ‘casual indifference’

Like the Catholic bishops, Southern Baptists say they don’t just have to combat abuse — they also have to change the culture that allowed such abuse to quietly continue.

“The cause of sexual abuse in the SBC is rooted in our culture of casual indifference to predatory sexual behavior,” wrote Susan Codone, an abuse survivor from Georgia, in the report issued last Friday. “This indifference is the expressionless face of denial and silence.”

Like Catholic bishops, Southern Baptists pastors work without much oversight from other church leaders. Each congregation is considered autonomous, with the pastor free to do what he wills. That autonomy has been used to avoid taking “appropriate action” against abusive clergy, the Southern Baptist report said.

At their meeting in Birmingham, thousands of Southern Baptist delegates — known as Messengers — will vote on proposals to introduce new measures of accountability. One would change the Southern Baptist Convention’s constitution to list “indifference to sexual abuse” claims and racism as reasons a church can be booted from the SBC.

Indifference, according to the proposal, would include employing a convicted sex offender, allowing a convicted sex offender to work as a volunteer with children, employing someone who covered up sex crimes and willfully disregarding child abuse reporting laws.

Another proposal would create a year-round committee to field misconduct claims. Right now, those complaints are only handled during annual meetings, when the Southern Baptist Convention is officially in session, said Moore.

Rachael Denhollander, an abuse survivor and advocate, has worked for a year on Southern Baptist President Greear’s committee to address sexual abuse. She called the proposals to be debated in Birmingham “foundational steps.”

“But the foundations will only be as good as what is built upon it,” Denhollander said.

Denhollander, who is not a Southern Baptist, called for the SBC to conduct a study of abuse in its churches.

“It’s very hard to solve a problem that you haven’t yet diagnosed,” she said.

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Source: https://www.cbs46.com/why-the-nations-two-largest-religious-groups-are-talking-about-sex-abuse-this-week/article_afb83561-b32d-5eaf-b735-c4570da39089.html

More than 80 suspected Georgia sex offenders nabbed in …, Jun 11, 2019 … Operation Broken Heart targeted people suspected of child sexual abuse or creating child porn.

more-than-80-suspected-georgia-sex-offenders-nabbed-in-…,-jun-11,-2019-…-operation-broken-heart-targeted-people-suspected-of-child-sexual-abuse-or-creating-child-porn.

Operation Broken Heart targeted people suspected of child sexual abuse or creating child porn

MACON, Ga. — More than 80 people in Georgia have been arrested in connection with a nationwide operation that targeted suspected online child sex offenders.

On Tuesday, the Internet Crimes Against Children (ICAC) task force announced the results of its participation in Operation ‘Broken Heart.’

A total of 1,700 suspected offenders were arrested between the months of April and May 2019 – and 81 were in Georgia.

Throughout Operation Broken Heart, 61 task forces across America investigated more than 18,500 complaints of crimes targeting children helped by technology.

They also gave more than 2,150 presentations on internet safety to 201,000 kids and adults.

The US Department of Justice says 308 of the 1,700 arrests are suspected of producing child porn or sexual abuse. Additionally, they found 357 kids who were victims of that abuse or were used in the child porn.

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Source: https://www.11alive.com/article/news/crime/81-arrested-in-georgia-child-sex-sting-called-operation-broken-heart/85-fbdd7965-3b0c-4050-acd1-47a374dccfc5

Ex-sheriff’s captain denied bond for probation violation

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A former Forsyth County Sheriff’s Office captain who was arrested in late April for allegedly violating the terms of his probation for a sexual assault and battery conviction has been denied bond by the Forsyth County Superior Court.

According to Chief Assistant District Attorney Sandra Partridge, Frank Augustus Huggins, 76, was denied bond at a hearing held on Wednesday, June 5 and was ordered to remain in custody until a bond revocation hearing is held later this month.

Huggins was taken into custody on April 30, after his home on Ridgecrest Avenue in Cumming was searched by an officer with the Department of Public Supervision, officials said.

At a bench trial in March, Huggins was found guilty of sexual assault and battery for touching a 16-year-old girl’s inner thigh in 2016 while acting as her driving instructor.

During the trial, a two-hour dash camera video recording was played in the courtroom which showed Huggins repeatedly touching the girl’s body.

Huggins was later sentenced to 10 years of probation and was ordered to complete 120 hours of community service by Forsyth County Chief Superior Court Judge Jeffrey S. Bagley. As part of his probation, Huggins was required to register as a sex offender and was banned from teaching or having authority over any other person, or from possessing firearms or drugs.

Previously, Huggins served as spokesman and part of the command staff for former Forsyth County Sheriff Ted Paxton from 2001-10 before retiring in 2010 as a captain.

In addition to his convictions for sexual assault and battery, Huggins has been charged with a probation violation, which is a felony under Georgia law.

Partridge said that Huggins’s bond revocation hearing will be held at 9 a.m. June 18.

Source: https://www.forsythnews.com/local/crime-courts/ex-sheriffs-captain-denied-bond-for-probation-violation/