Restaurant owner gets $1.7M over claim of city harassment

restaurant-owner-gets-$1.7m-over-claim-of-city-harassment

 

STOCKBRIDGE, Ga. (AP) — A suburban Atlanta barbecue restaurant owner will get $1.7 million to settle a federal lawsuit claiming he was harassed by government officials and employees.

The city of Stockbridge’s insurer will pay the money to Arick Whitson, owner of Georgia Championship Barbeque Co. Whitson’s lawyers will get $534,000 from the total amount, according to terms obtained by The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

The city is not admitting wrongdoing as part of the process and said it is settling to avoid “a protracted legal process.”

A judge approved the settlement Tuesday.

The 2017 lawsuit accused Stockbridge City Councilman Elton Alexander of repeatedly retaliating against Whitson’s restaurant when Whitson declined to give Alexander a free meal.

The suit said the dispute began in May 2016 when Alexander visited the restaurant and asked Whitson if he wanted to do “business with the city.” Whitson replied that he did and Alexander ordered $60 worth of food.

When Alexander was asked to pay, the councilmember said, “I thought you wanted to do business with the city?” Alexander then left without paying.

Whitson said code enforcement officials began visiting frequently and that he had trouble getting a liquor license or a sign permit.

The owner also said Alexander falsely accused him of being a sex offender Whitson filed an ethics complaint against Alexander in January 2017, which he said only intensified Alexander’s attacks.

Alexander denied the claims and wrote in an email to the newspaper that he did not agree with the city’s insurer’s decision to settle.

“This is a business decision by the insurance company to settle this lawsuit in its entirety and to release the City of Stockbridge and Elton Alexander from all claims,” he wrote. “Mr. Alexander does not support the settlement and does not have the authority to override the insurance company’s decision to settle this lawsuit.

For copyright information, check with the distributor of this item, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

Source: https://thebrunswicknews.com/news/state_news/restaurant-owner-gets-1-7m-over-claim-of-city-harassment/article_399424e5-490e-5ccf-bce0-e406b02fa7fd.html

Sex offender wanted in Thomas Co.

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Sex offender wanted in Thomas Co.
Darius Perez Jackson (Source: Thomas County Sheriff’s Office)

By WALB News Team| April 16, 2021 at 4:46 PM EDT – Updated April 16 at 4:46 PM

THOMASVILLE, Ga. (WALB) – The Thomas County Sheriff’s Office is searching for a wanted man, according to a Facebook post by the agency.

Darius Perez Jackson is wanted for failure to register as a sex offender.

If you see Jackson, you’re asked to call (229) 225-3315 between the hours of 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday or (229) 225-3333 any time after 5 p.m.

Copyright 2021 WALB. All rights reserved.

Source: https://www.walb.com/2021/04/16/sex-offender-wanted-thomas-co/

Princes William, Harry won’t walk side-by-side at funeral

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By Associated Press| April 15, 2021 at 10:57 AM EDT – Updated April 15 at 2:03 PM

LONDON (AP) — Prince William and Prince Harry won’t walk side-by-side Saturday as they follow their grandfather’s coffin into the church ahead of Prince Philip’s funeral, minimizing the chances of any awkward moments between the brothers who are grappling with strained relations since Harry’s decision to step away from royal duties last year.

Buckingham Palace on Thursday released the broad outlines of the funeral program for Queen Elizabeth II’s husband, who died April 9 at 99. The palace revealed that William and Harry’s cousin, Peter Phillips, will walk between the princes as they escort the coffin to St. George’s Chapel at Windsor Castle, west of London.

Prince Charles, the heir to the throne and the father of the princes, together with his sister, Princess Anne, will lead the 15-member procession.

The brothers had been closely watched as Saturday’s funeral will almost certainly remind the pair of their shared grief at another royal funeral more than two decades ago. As young boys, both walked behind their mother Princess Diana’s coffin in 1997 in London in a ceremony watched around the world.

Palace officials refused to comment when asked whether the positioning of William and Harry was an effort to minimize family tensions, which have grown after Harry and his wife Meghan, the Duchess of Sussex, gave an explosive interview to Oprah Winfrey that suggested an unnamed member of the royal family had made a racist comment to Harry before the birth of their child Archie.

Meghan, who is pregnant and living in California with Harry, is not coming to the funeral on the advice of her doctor.

“We’re not going to be drawn into those perceptions of drama or anything like that,’’ a palace spokesman said while speaking on condition of anonymity in line with policy. “This is a funeral and the arrangements have been agreed and they represent Her Majesty’s wishes.”

African reaction to the passing of Prince Philip

In another effort to preserve family unity, the palace said senior royals would wear civilian clothes to the funeral. The decision, signed off by the queen, means that Harry won’t risk being the only member of the royal family not in uniform during the funeral.

Members of the royal family often wear uniforms to public events by virtue of their honorary roles with the British Army, Royal Navy and Royal Air Force, but Harry lost his honorary military titles when he decided to give up frontline royal duties last year. As a result, protocol suggests that Harry, an army veteran who served two tours of duty in Afghanistan, would only wear a suit with medals at royal functions.

The decision also sidesteps another potential controversy after reports that Prince Andrew, the queen’s second-oldest son, considered wearing an admiral’s uniform to his father’s funeral. Andrew retains his military titles even though he was forced to step away from royal duties after a disastrous interview with the BBC about his acquaintance with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

At Marlborough House Gardens today, The Prince of Wales and The Duchess of Cornwall viewed a selection of flowers that have been left by members of the public in memory of The Duke of Edinburgh. pic.twitter.com/vZQ3KNkIKF

— The Royal Family (@RoyalFamily) April 15, 2021

Attendance at the funeral will be limited to 30 people because of the coronavirus restrictions in England. The list will include several of Philip’s relatives from Germany, together with immediate members of the royal family. The children in the family will not attend.

Guests will wear masks inside the chapel and observe social distancing. The queen, always the first to set an example, will also wear a mask.

In other details released about the funeral, Royal Marine buglers will play “Action Stations,” an alarm that alerts sailors to prepare for battle.

Philip, also known as the Duke of Edinburgh, served in the Royal Navy for 12 years and maintained close ties to the armed forces throughout his life. Military personnel will have a large role in honoring him Saturday despite the attendance limit.

Members of the Royal Navy, the Royal Marines, the Royal Air Force and the British Army will take part in the funeral procession. Philip’s coffin will be carried to St. George’s Chapel on a specially adapted Land Rover that he designed himself.

On Thursday, Charles and his wife Camilla visited Marlborough House in central London to see a sea of floral tributes for Philip, which have been moved there from the gates of Buckingham Palace.

The couple spent some time looking at the cards and notes with the flowers. The items left in tribute included a model of a Land Rover similar to the one that will bear Philip’s coffin on Saturday, with the words “The Duke R.I.P” on the roof.

Copyright 2021 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

Source: https://www.walb.com/2021/04/15/senior-royals-skip-uniforms-prince-philips-funeral/

Senior royals to skip uniforms at Prince Philip’s funeral

senior-royals-to-skip-uniforms-at-prince-philip’s-funeral

By Associated Press| April 15, 2021 at 10:57 AM EDT – Updated April 15 at 2:03 PM

LONDON (AP) — Prince William and Prince Harry won’t walk side-by-side Saturday as they follow their grandfather’s coffin into the church ahead of Prince Philip’s funeral, minimizing the chances of any awkward moments between the brothers who are grappling with strained relations since Harry’s decision to step away from royal duties last year.

Buckingham Palace on Thursday released the broad outlines of the funeral program for Queen Elizabeth II’s husband, who died April 9 at 99. The palace revealed that William and Harry’s cousin, Peter Phillips, will walk between the princes as they escort the coffin to St. George’s Chapel at Windsor Castle, west of London.

Prince Charles, the heir to the throne and the father of the princes, together with his sister, Princess Anne, will lead the 15-member procession.

The brothers had been closely watched as Saturday’s funeral will almost certainly remind the pair of their shared grief at another royal funeral more than two decades ago. As young boys, both walked behind their mother Princess Diana’s coffin in 1997 in London in a ceremony watched around the world.

Palace officials refused to comment when asked whether the positioning of William and Harry was an effort to minimize family tensions, which have grown after Harry and his wife Meghan, the Duchess of Sussex, gave an explosive interview to Oprah Winfrey that suggested an unnamed member of the royal family had made a racist comment to Harry before the birth of their child Archie.

Meghan, who is pregnant and living in California with Harry, is not coming to the funeral on the advice of her doctor.

“We’re not going to be drawn into those perceptions of drama or anything like that,’’ a palace spokesman said while speaking on condition of anonymity in line with policy. “This is a funeral and the arrangements have been agreed and they represent Her Majesty’s wishes.”

African reaction to the passing of Prince Philip

In another effort to preserve family unity, the palace said senior royals would wear civilian clothes to the funeral. The decision, signed off by the queen, means that Harry won’t risk being the only member of the royal family not in uniform during the funeral.

Members of the royal family often wear uniforms to public events by virtue of their honorary roles with the British Army, Royal Navy and Royal Air Force, but Harry lost his honorary military titles when he decided to give up frontline royal duties last year. As a result, protocol suggests that Harry, an army veteran who served two tours of duty in Afghanistan, would only wear a suit with medals at royal functions.

The decision also sidesteps another potential controversy after reports that Prince Andrew, the queen’s second-oldest son, considered wearing an admiral’s uniform to his father’s funeral. Andrew retains his military titles even though he was forced to step away from royal duties after a disastrous interview with the BBC about his acquaintance with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

At Marlborough House Gardens today, The Prince of Wales and The Duchess of Cornwall viewed a selection of flowers that have been left by members of the public in memory of The Duke of Edinburgh. pic.twitter.com/vZQ3KNkIKF

— The Royal Family (@RoyalFamily) April 15, 2021

Attendance at the funeral will be limited to 30 people because of the coronavirus restrictions in England. The list will include several of Philip’s relatives from Germany, together with immediate members of the royal family. The children in the family will not attend.

Guests will wear masks inside the chapel and observe social distancing. The queen, always the first to set an example, will also wear a mask.

In other details released about the funeral, Royal Marine buglers will play “Action Stations,” an alarm that alerts sailors to prepare for battle.

Philip, also known as the Duke of Edinburgh, served in the Royal Navy for 12 years and maintained close ties to the armed forces throughout his life. Military personnel will have a large role in honoring him Saturday despite the attendance limit.

Members of the Royal Navy, the Royal Marines, the Royal Air Force and the British Army will take part in the funeral procession. Philip’s coffin will be carried to St. George’s Chapel on a specially adapted Land Rover that he designed himself.

On Thursday, Charles and his wife Camilla visited Marlborough House in central London to see a sea of floral tributes for Philip, which have been moved there from the gates of Buckingham Palace.

The couple spent some time looking at the cards and notes with the flowers. The items left in tribute included a model of a Land Rover similar to the one that will bear Philip’s coffin on Saturday, with the words “The Duke R.I.P” on the roof.

Copyright 2021 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

Source: https://www.walb.com/2021/04/15/senior-royals-skip-uniforms-prince-philips-funeral/

Son says Philip’s death has left ‘huge void’ in queen’s life

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By Associated Press| April 11, 2021 at 9:34 AM EDT – Updated April 11 at 11:42 AM

LONDON (AP) — The death of Prince Philip has left a “huge void” in Queen Elizabeth II’s life, their son Prince Andrew said Sunday, as well-wishers continued to leave floral tributes outside the gates of royal residences in memory of the monarch’s husband.

Andrew, the third of the couple’s four children, attended church at the Royal Chapel of All Saints in Windsor along with other members of the royal family, two days after the 99-year-old Philip died at Windsor Castle.

Andrew said his mother “described it as having left a huge void in her life.”

“We’ve lost, almost, the grandfather of the nation,” he said. “And I feel very sorry and supportive of my mother, who’s feeling it probably more than everybody else.”

His younger brother, Prince Edward, called Philip’s death a “dreadful shock” but said the 94-year-old queen was “bearing up.”

Edward’s wife, Sophie, Countess of Wessex, said the monarch was “thinking of others before herself.”

She said Philip’s death at Windsor Castle, which came three weeks after he was discharged from a month-long hospital stay, was “peaceful.”

“It was right for him and it was so gentle. It was just like someone took him by the hand and off he went,” Sophie told well-wishers. “It was very, very peaceful and that’s all you want for somebody, isn’t it?”

Both palace and government officials urged people not to come in person to pay their respects because of coronavirus restrictions on social mixing. But hundreds of people on Sunday brought notes, cards and flowers to the gates of Windsor Castle, located 20 miles (32 kilometers) west of London, while others laid tributes outside Buckingham Palace in the British capital.

Neil Loughton, founder of the Penny Farthing Club, rode his antique bicycle to the palace gates to pay tribute.

“I think that there are some things that are just important and need to be done. Ninety-nine years of life and more than 70 years of service deserves some recognition,” he said.

Philip’s funeral is set to take place April 17 at Windsor Castle. Only 30 people will be able to attend under the current coronavirus restrictions in England, but the slimmed-down service is scheduled to be broadcast live on television.

Philip’s grandson Prince Harry, who stepped away from royal duties last year and now lives in California, will attend the service along with other members of the royal family, palace officials have said. His wife, Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, is pregnant and has been advised by her doctor not to make the journey.

Royal family members said they appreciated the outpouring of tributes and good wishes from people across Britain and around the world to Philip, who was the queen’s consort and support through more than seven decades of marriage.

Prince Edward, 57, said the “extraordinary” tributes meant a lot to the royal family.

“It just goes to show, he might have been our father, grandfather, father-in-law, but he meant so much to so many other people,” he said.

Andrew, 61, who has largely kept out of the public eye since 2019 amid controversy over his friendship with the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, also praised the “absolutely amazing tributes.”

Copyright 2021 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

Source: https://www.walb.com/2021/04/11/son-says-philips-death-has-left-huge-void-queens-life/

Police confirm remains found of missing Iowa girl Breasia Terrell

police-confirm-remains-found-of-missing-iowa-girl-breasia-terrell

By KWQC Staff| March 31, 2021 at 3:43 PM EDT – Updated March 31 at 3:59 PM

DAVENPORT, Iowa (KWQC) – The search for Breasia Terrell has come to an end after officials announced they had found her remains.

In a press conference on Wednesday, officials with the Davenport Police Department announced the remains found last week near DeWitt were Breasia’s.

“This investigation continues to be a joint investigation by the Davenport Police Department, the Division of Criminal Investigations from the Iowa Department of Public Safety and our partners at the FBI,” Davenport Police Chief Sikorski said during Wednesday’s conference. “I can assure our community that investigators are working diligently to bring justice on Breasia’s half. Again, they have been nonstop for the last 9 months. I want to assure our community that when we are able to share details on this investigation we will.”

This comes after a heavy police presence was seen in DeWitt last week. Officials had blocked 270th Avenue between 210th and 218th Streets just east of Highway 61 and south of Kunau Implement Co.

Officials with the Clinton County Sheriff’s Office, Davenport Police Department and the Division of Criminal Investigations announced the following Tuesday they were investigating after human remains were discovered.

Breasia was last seen in July when she was reported missing. An Amber Alert was issued but canceled in January of this year.

According to Mitch Mortvedt, the Assistant Director of the Field Operations Bureau for the Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation, the Amber Alert was canceled because of the length of time that had passed.

“Her investigation has always been a missing person case and classified as such,” Mortvedt said. “The circumstances around her missing met the criteria of an Amber Alert in Iowa so that was an additional part of her case. Amber Alerts are issued for the immediacy of the incident at hand. It has been six months and we just canceled the Amber Alert portion of it. It does not change anything about how the case is investigated at all.”

In December, Sikorski said the case remained active and open.

“Anything and everything is important,” Sikorski said. “And I really want to make that push for our community to please, no lead is too small. We need to find her. That’s the bottom line.”

Police named 48-year-old Henry Dinkins as a person of interest. He was arrested on unrelated sex offender registration violations.

The FBI had announced their involvement in the case and offered a $10,000 reward for information that led to locating Breasia or the arrest of someone who was involved in her disappearance.

Anyone with information can contact the Davenport Police Department at 563-388-3661 or call 911.

Copyright 2021 KWQC via Gray Media Group, Inc. All rights reserved.

Source: https://www.walb.com/2021/03/31/police-confirm-remains-found-missing-iowa-girl-breasia-terrell/

US waives FBI checks on caregivers at new migrant facilities

us-waives-fbi-checks-on-caregivers-at-new-migrant-facilities

By Associated Press| March 27, 2021 at 3:14 PM EDT – Updated March 27 at 5:25 PM

HOUSTON (AP) — The Biden administration is not requiring FBI fingerprint background checks of caregivers at its rapidly expanding network of emergency sites to hold thousands of immigrant teenagers, alarming child welfare experts who say the waiver compromises safety.

In the rush to get children out of overcrowded and often unsuitable Border Patrol sites, President Joe Biden’s team is turning to a measure used by previous administrations: tent camps, convention centers and other huge facilities operated by private contractors and funded by U.S. Health and Human Services. In March alone, the Biden administration announced it will open eight new emergency sites across the Southwest adding 15,000 new beds, more than doubling the size of its existing system.

These emergency sites don’t have to be licensed by state authorities or provide the same services as permanent HHS facilities. They also cost far more, an estimated $775 per child per day.

And to staff the sites quickly, the Biden administration has waived vetting procedures intended to protect minors from potential harm.

Staff and volunteers directly caring for children at new emergency sites don’t have to undergo FBI fingerprint checks, which use criminal databases not accessible to the public and can overcome someone changing their name or using a false identity.

HHS issued a statement Friday saying that direct care staff and volunteers “must pass public record criminal background checks.” Public records checks generally take less time but are reliant on the subject providing correct information.

The agency says those giving direct care are supervised by federal employees or others who have passed fingerprint-based background checks. “In the Emergency Intake Sites, HHS is implementing the standards of care used for children in an emergency response setting,” the agency said.

During former President Donald Trump’s administration, HHS for months did not ensure FBI fingerprint checks or child welfare screenings were done for workers at a large camp in Tornillo, Texas. An Associated Press investigation in 2018 also found staff at another camp at Homestead, Florida, were not given routine screenings to rule out allegations of child abuse or neglect.

HHS’ inspector general warned then that FBI fingerprint checks “provide a unique safeguard” over most commercial background checks that search a person’s name.

“While the various background checks could identify some past criminal convictions or sexual offenses, these checks were not as extensive as the FBI fingerprint background checks,” the inspector general found.

Laura Nodolf, the district attorney in Midland, Texas, where HHS opened an emergency site this month, said that without fingerprint checks, “we truly do not know who the individual is who is providing direct care.”

“That’s placing the children under care of HHS in the path, potentially, of a sex offender,” Nodolf said. “They are putting these children in a position of becoming potential victims.”

Dr. Amy Cohen, a child psychiatrist who is executive director of the immigration advocacy group Every Last One, noted that HHS requires fingerprint checks of relatives who seek to take in children as part of a vetting process that takes more than 30 days on average.

“Failure to check fingerprints of frontline facility staff exposes vulnerable migrant children to a significant danger of physical and sexual abuse,” she said.

The Biden administration has 18,000 children and teenagers in its custody, a figure that has risen almost daily over the last several weeks. While Biden continues to expel most adults and many families crossing the border, he has declined to reinstate expulsions of unaccompanied immigrant children, which stopped last year after a now-stayed federal court order.

More than 5,000 youths are in border custody, many of them in a South Texas tent facility with limited space, food and access to the outdoors. But Border Patrol is apprehending hundreds more minors than HHS is releasing every day — a difference of 325 just on Thursday.

At the downtown Dallas convention center, one of HHS’ emergency sites, almost all of its 2,300 beds were filled just one week after it opened this month.

Child advocates say that rather than opening more unlicensed emergency facilities, the administration must speed up placing children with sponsors, especially the approximately 40% of youths in custody who have a parent in the country ready to take them.

HHS has tried to expedite processing of minors in recent weeks, allowing some youths to be placed with parents while fingerprint checks are pending and authorizing the use of government funds to pay for airfare when a child is released.

Ana, the mother of a 17-year-old teen detained in Dallas, told AP said her son fled gangs trying to recruit him in El Salvador and hoped to join her in Virginia. After an eight-day journey, the teenager crossed the U.S.-Mexico border on March 9. Eight days would pass until she heard from authorities at the border that they had him in custody.

She received a 10-minute call from him on March 20, after he was taken to the Dallas facility. It was the first time she’s spoken to him since he entered the country. She says she has repeatedly called HHS’ Office of Refugee Resettlement to ask if they would release him to her family, but they have refused, saying they have to process her case. In the meantime, she’s ready to present documentation proving she is his mother and fit to take him.

“I don’t understand why they are making it so difficult,” said Ana, who is not being identified by her last name to protect her son’s privacy. “I know that we are in a pandemic, but maybe I think that it is that they are behind schedule, that maybe there are a lot of people there.”

Tornillo and Homestead were sharply criticized by Democrats and child welfare experts who warned of the potential trauma of detaining thousands of teenagers without adequate support.

Volunteers from the American Red Cross provided care at the first two emergency HHS sites, a converted camp for oil workers in Midland, Texas, and the Dallas convention center. Those volunteers are now being phased out.

The Red Cross and HHS for several days refused to acknowledge that the volunteers weren’t given FBI fingerprint checks. The Red Cross first said that all of its volunteers underwent background checks when they joined the group. On Tuesday, the group said it was “refreshing” checks on about 300 volunteers sent to care for children and that it had not found any new red flags.

HHS spokesman Mark Weber said he could not yet identify which companies or groups will now step in. The department asked contractors in mid-March to submit bids to provide child care and transportation.

Leecia Welch, an attorney for the nonprofit National Center for Youth Law who monitors the treatment of immigrant children, said lawyers would pay “close attention to whether this temporary waiver becomes standard operating practice.”

“Given the urgency of the current placement crisis, families deserve the same flexibility as the for-profit companies contracting with the federal government,” she said.

Safety concerns have already been raised about the Midland camp. One official working there noted a lack of new clothes and caseworkers when teenagers initially arrived, and state regulators last week warned that the water on site may not be safe, forcing U.S. authorities to give teens bottles until they could arrange for water deliveries.

Michelle Saenz-Rodriguez, a Dallas-based immigration lawyer, described the Dallas convention center as reminiscent of a barracks but “very welcoming.” She visited the convention center in its first days as a volunteer for Catholic Charities and said that cots for more than 2,000 boys have been placed in socially distanced rows in a ballroom.

After being bused to the site, the boys get clean clothes, a pillow, a blanket and a COVID-19 test, Saenz-Rodriguez said. She saw them last week sitting together at tables, talking and playing card games. Most did not understand why they’d been brought to Dallas or what would happen to them next, she said.

“Their number one question is ‘How long are we going to be here? What’s going to happen to us?’” Saenz-Rodriguez said.

Associated Press journalist Jake Bleiberg in Dallas contributed to this report.

Copyright 2021 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

Source: https://www.walb.com/2021/03/27/us-waives-fbi-checks-caregivers-new-migrant-facilities/

Sylvania man admits to distributing child pornography

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According to The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Georgia, a Screven County man faces a minimum of five years in federal prison after admitting that he distributed child pornography. The plea carries a possible penalty of up to 20 years in federal prison. A sentencing date has not yet been set.

From the Press Release:

Daniel Boulineau34, of Sylvania, Ga., pled guilty in U.S. District Court to Distribution of Child Pornography, said David H. Estes, Acting U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Georgia. The charges carry a minimum penalty of five years in prison and a statutory maximum of up to 20 years, along with substantial financial penalties, registration as a sex offender, and a period of supervised release following incarceration. There is no parole in the federal system.

“The resolution of this case once again serves notice that we and our law enforcement partners will relentlessly pursue predators who prey upon vulnerable children,” said Acting U.S. Attorney Estes. “As a result of this investigation, Daniel Boulineau will be held accountable for his crime.”

As outlined in court documents and testimony, in early August 2020, Boulineau admitted that he electronically distributed images and videos of a minor engaging in sexually explicit conduct. An investigation by the FBI and the Child Exploitation Task Force into online activity led to Boulineau’s arrest on Sept. 1, 2020.

A sentencing date has not yet been set.

“The distribution of child pornography is an attack against the most vulnerable members of society,” said Chris Hacker, Special Agent in Charge of FBI Atlanta. “No sentence for this man will remove the scars left on the children victimized by his crimes, but hopefully it will serve as a warning that the FBI will use any resources necessary to apprehend anyone who carries out these appalling crimes.”

The case is being investigated by the FBI, and prosecuted for the United States by Assistant U.S. Attorney and Project Safe Childhood Coordinator Tara M. Lyons.

AllOnGeorgia

AllOnGeorgia

Source: https://allongeorgia.com/bulloch-public-safety/sylvania-man-admits-to-distributing-child-pornography/

Grand jury indicts local man on murder charges

grand-jury-indicts-local-man-on-murder-charges

 

U-R update

A Milledgeville man was indicted by a Baldwin County grand jury last week in connection with the shooting death of a 26-year-old man inside his apartment back in August 2019.

Two other men also were arrested by authorities for their reported involvement in the murder case as well, but their cases were not presented to the grand jury.

Grand jurors returned a four-count indictment last Wednesday against Xavier Rashad Chambers, according to records filed in the Baldwin County Superior Court Clerk’s Office.

The indictment charges Chambers with malice murder, felony murder, aggravated assault, and possession of a firearm during the commission of a crime.

The defendant is accused of having shot Wydeldrck Denson to death while inside his apartment on the 1900 block of Karen Circle on Aug. 9, 2019.

Denson, who worked at a industrial plant in Milledgeville, was shot once in the abdomen. Following the shooting, Denson was taken by ambulance to what was then known as Navicent Health Baldwin hospital in Milledgeville where he died a short time later.

Two other men reportedly were with Chambers at the time of the crimes.

Milledgeville police identified those two men as Tremonte Boyer and Durrell Malik Roberson.

Boyer and Roberson were both charged with being a party to the crime of murder at the time they were arrested.

Roberson is a former detention officer with the Putnam County Sheriff’s Office in Eatonton. He currently is serving a three-year prison term after he pleaded guilty to three counts of sexual assault against an inmate or person in custody, and one count of violation of oath of office by a public official.

Police believe the shooting resulted from a burglary gone wrong.

Meanwhile, grand jurors also indicted several other defendants on unrelated criminal charges, according to court records. They included:

  • Steven Duane Bryant, aggravated assault under the Georgia Family Violence Act, false imprisonment, battery under the Georgia Family Violence Act, and terrorisic threats.
  • Howard Trent Ford, two counts of aggravated assault.
  • Antoine Renaldo Smith, aggravated assault on a state correctional officer, and obstruction of a law enforcement officer.
  • Patrice Rene Rocker, serious injury by a vehicle, driving under the influence, failure to yield right-of-way, and failure to wear seat safety belt.
  • Travis Bernard Butts, Violation of the Street Gang Terrorism and Prevention Act, obstruction of a law enforcement officer, escape, and disorderly conduct.
  • Aaron Willie Stephens, incest.
  • Tyler Eddie Cowan, obstruction of a law enforcement officer, and robbery by sudden snatching.
  • Tobias Emory Bridges, interference with government property.
  • Kendrick Keshon Johnson, interference with government property.
  • Michael Health Graham, fleeing or attempting to elude a police officer, driving under the influence of less safe, (drugs), obstruction of a law enforcement officer, driving while license suspended, and no proof of insurance.
  • Dustin Loyde Adams, fleeing or attempting to elude a police officer, driving under the influence less safe, (drugs), reckless driving, no proof of insurance, and expired tag.
  • Tavuish Nigel Goddard, three counts of entering an automobile, and one count of burglary in the first degree.
  • Rontrelle Devon Brown, three counts of burglary in the first degree.
  • Jarwaski Lamont Pounds, aggravated stalking.
  • Perry Brandon Jones, entering an automobile, theft by taking, and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon.
  • Maityious Matthews, 32 counts of entering an automobile, three counts of theft by taking, possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony, possession of tools for the commission of a crime, and Violation of the Georgia Controlled Substances Act (VGCSA) for possession of marijuana with intent to distribute.
  • Marius LaTroy Middlebrooks, criminal damage to property in the second degree, and false report of a crime.
  • Rose Leigh Gilmer, three counts of reckless conduct.
  • Robert Morris Bishop, failure to register as a sex offender, making a false statement, and obstruction of a law enforcement officer.
  • Tobias Emory Bridges, VGCSA for possession of methamphetamine, and obstruction of a law enforcement officer.
  • Tyreques Terrell Whipple, VGCSA for possession of marijuana with intent to distribute, and possession of a firearm by a first offender probationer.
  • Xavier Manyell Foster, VGCSA for possession of cocaine, possession of marijuana with intent to distribute, two counts of possession of an illegal substance within 1,000 feet of a housing project, and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon.
  • Charles Bernard McGowan, VGCSA for possession of methamphetamine, and criminal damage to property in the first degree.

Mrs. Ida Lorraine Weaver West, 92, passed away on Sunday, March 14, 2021. She was a native of Marian County, Georgia and had lived in Augusta for many years before retiring and moving to Milledgeville in 1991. She was predeceased by her husband, Leonard S. West; parents, Raleigh Busha Weaver…

Funeral services for Mr. Larry Garrison Powell, 76, will be conducted Monday, March 15, 2021 at 2 p.m. in Williams Funeral Home Chapel with the Rev. Bill Barnes officiating. Interment will follow in Heritage Memorial Park by the Pond. The family will receive friends at the funeral home Monda…

Marion Pace Brown, 76, passed away Saturday, March 13, 2021. Services will be held at 5:30 p.m. Thursday, March 18, at the chapel of Moores Funeral Home. Burial will be private. Mr. Brown was born in Irwinton, Ga. on June 8, 1944, to Edward Jessie Brown and Ida Pace Brown. He was retired fro…

Carol Ann Melvin, 74, passed away Thursday, March 11, 2021. Graveside services will be held at a later date. Ms. Melvin was born in Arlington, Ga. on Sept. 28, 1946, to Clayton Eugene Melvin and Carolyn Newberry Melvin. She lived in Leary and Arlington but had made her home in Milledgeville …

Carol Connell, 69, passed away Saturday, March 6, 2021. Services will be held at 11 a.m. Thursday, March 11, at the chapel of Moores Funeral Home. Burial will follow at Coopers Cemetery. Ms. Connell was born March 14, 1951, in Dublin, Ga. to Albert John Connell and Grace Turner Connell. She …

Source: https://www.unionrecorder.com/news/grand-jury-indicts-local-man-on-murder-charges/article_0a9ff19a-8601-11eb-9a62-f3a1c65d94f8.html

NYC prosecutor leading Trump probe won’t seek re-election

nyc-prosecutor-leading-trump-probe-won’t-seek-re-election

By MICHAEL R. SISAK| March 12, 2021 at 8:10 AM EST – Updated March 12 at 8:35 AM

NEW YORK (AP) — The veteran New York City prosecutor overseeing a criminal investigation into former President Donald Trump said Friday that he will not seek re-election, opting against a primary fight with progressive candidates who say he’s a relic unfit for the reform era.

Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr. made the announcement in a memo to his staff, ending months of speculation about his future. His term expires at the end of the year.

Vance, a Democrat, counted Harvey Weinstein’s rape conviction a year ago among his crowning achievements but faced withering criticism over other high-profile cases, including dropping rape charges against French financier Dominique Strauss-Kahn in 2011 and declining to prosecute Ivanka and Donald Trump Jr. over fraud allegations in 2012.

“I never imagined myself as District Attorney for decades like my predecessors. I never thought of this as my last job, even though it’s the best job and biggest honor I’ll ever have. I said twelve years ago that change is fundamentally good and necessary for any institution,” Vance wrote in a statement about his decision.

Vance’s decision not to run for re-election was widely anticipated, but he held off on making it official while the U.S. Supreme Court was weighing whether his office could obtain Trump’s tax records. The court ruled in Vance’s favor last month.

Vance, 66, raised little money this election cycle and stayed curiously quiet as other Democrats campaigned to replace him. Eight candidates are on the ballot for the party’s June primary, an election that will likely decide Vance’s successor because Manhattan is so heavily Democratic.

The Feb. 22 Supreme Court ruling giving Vance’s office access to Trump’s taxes was a capstone for his tenure as district attorney, ending an 18-month fight with the former president’s lawyers and bolstering a grand jury investigation that has drawn worldwide attention.

Vance is conducting a wide-ranging investigation that includes examining whether Trump or his businesses lied about the value of assets to gain favorable loan terms and tax benefits, and hush-money payments paid to women on Trump’s behalf.

Vance will continue to lead the Trump probe through the end of this year with his general counsel, Carey Dunne, who made appeals court arguments on the office’s behalf. He recently hired former mafia prosecutor Mark Pomerantz to assist in the probe. In a statement after the Supreme Court ruled, Vance said: “The work continues.”

Vance’s exit, however, means it will almost certainly be a brand-new D.A. who sees the Trump case through. And, in the short term, legal observers say, his announcement could hasten the departure of prosecutors who’ve been loyal to him and won’t want to work for his successor.

Vance’s successor will be just the fourth elected district attorney in Manhattan in the last 80 years. Frank Hogan, the namesake of the street where the office is located, served for 31 years. Robert Morgenthau was in office for 34 years, and Vance will leave after 12.

It’s one of the most high-profile prosecution jobs in the world, dramatized on TV’s “Law and Order” and “Blue Bloods.” The district attorney oversees a staff of 500 lawyers and has a budget of about $125 million.

A separate forfeiture fund bankrolled by Wall Street settlements and worth more than $800 million is used for grants to criminal justice and community organizations and big initiatives, like testing backlogged rape kits — a push celebrated by the likes of “Law & Order: SVU” star Mariska Hargitay.

Vance, whose father was President Jimmy Carter’s secretary of state, served as an assistant district attorney under Morgenthau in the 1980s. Practicing law in Seattle for 16 years, he represented Vili Fualaau, who as a preteen became involved in a sexual relationship with his sixth-grade teacher, Mary Kay Letourneau, and fathered two of her children.

Vance returned to New York in 2004 and was elected district attorney five years later. Running as a death penalty opponent, he was buoyed by endorsements from Morgenthau and former Mayor David Dinkins.

Vance positioned himself as a national criminal justice innovator, taking interest in national and global efforts to prevent cyberattacks and gun violence. He has testified before Congress about cellphone encryption and financial transparency.

After Vance made a made a campaign pledge to re-examine the 1979 disappearance of 6-year-old Etan Patz, a 2012 tip led to a new suspect and ultimately a conviction.

Weinstein’s conviction in the landmark #MeToo case last year boosted Vance’s lagging legacy, giving him a career-defining win a decade into a tenure clouded by concerns that he repeatedly gave powerful people special treatment, such as sidestepping an effort to pursue charges against Weinstein in 2015.

In addition to Strauss-Kahn, whose charges were dropped amid concerns about inconsistencies in the account of the hotel maid who accused him, a Vance prosecutor once took the unusual step of seeking low-level sex offender status for Jeffrey Epstein, alarming the judge who said she had “never seen a prosecutor’s office do anything like this.” Vance’s office also struck a deal in 2016 so well-connected gynecologist Robert Hadden could avoid prison for allegedly sexually abusing patients.

Copyright 2021 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

Source: https://www.walb.com/2021/03/12/nyc-prosecutor-leading-trump-probe-wont-seek-re-election/