Sunday, December 23, 2012
Lynchburg teen shares special gift
Commissioners Hire Deputy Dog Warden
The agreement, which was created December 10 between the County and J. Marvin Arnold, states that the county is in “an immediate need for support services” at the Fayette County Dog Shelter, and that the county “deems it necessary and advisable to enter into a contract” for support services at the shelter.......READ MORE Fayette Advocate
Schools: armed officers better than armed teachers
Although no decisions have been made in any of the school districts regarding this security measure, discussions about it in the new year are likely to take place...... READ MORE
4 holiday travelers die in Ohio car crash
4 holiday travelers die in Ohio car crash - USA TODAY dlvr.it/2hFLqq
— Ohio News daily (@OhioNewsdaily) December 23, 2012
Luncheon brings Christmas cheer to Hocking County children
Gifts for Hocking County Children Services
From left - Nancy Leighman, children services administrator for the newly formed South Central Job and Family Services; Julie Mogavero, interim director for Hocking County Children Services; Bobbi Bishop; Mary Holl, organizer of the luncheon; and Jenny Beard all display several gifts that were provided for children and teens associated with Hocking County Children Services.
Despite lay offs, Sands Hill to operate through 2013
Steve Morris of Rhino Resources Partners, LP, said the mine will reduce production due to what he called challenges in the coal market. Morris is vice president of external reporting and investor relations for Rhino which is headquartered in Lexington, Ky.......READ MORE Courier photo by Michael O’Brien
Despite lay offs, Sands Hill to operate through 2013
HAMDEN — Vice President Steve Morris of Rhino Resources Partners, owner of the Sands Hill Coal Mine said approximately 50 people have been laid off. The mine is expected to remain in operation during 2013.
Winners of Americanism and Government Test announced
On Tuesday, the American Legion Post 142 in Waverly and American Legion Auxiliary honored the Pike County students who had the highest scores on the annual Americanism and Government Test, which was administered on Nov. 6.
The six winning students, along with parents and school guidance counselors, were given pizza at the American Legion, and the students received their awards, which were $100 for each student. Don Edler, Americanism and Government Test chairman for Post 142 handed out the awards, and Virgil Layne, commander of the post, and Russ Mossbarger, post finance officer, were also present...... READ MORE By Matt Lucas/News Watchman Staff Writer
American Legion
Winners of the American Legion Merritt Post 142 Americanism and Government Test were honored on Tuesday. Pictured here (left to right) are winners Beau Barley (Waverly-junior), Makenzie Moorman (Piketon-sophomore), Alanna Leslie (Pike CTC-junior) and Tori Dingus (Pike CTC-senior). Not pictured are Cody Goodrich (Western-senior) and Ryan Ellis Brewster (Waverly-sophomore).
Holiday shopping safe tips
CHILLICOTHE — With very little on the schedule in terms of local entertainment options this weekend, area residents can turn their full focus to getting that holiday shopping finished.
That means plenty of people will be out and about downtown and along Bridge Street and Western Avenue heading to the plethora of shopping destinations to make those final holiday purchases. It also means plenty of reasons to be extra vigilant both behind the wheel and in and around the stores.
Southern Ohio Crime Stoppers is offering several suggestions to make sure your final holiday shopping weekends are safe and productive:
• Try to go shopping with someone. You’re safer when not alone.
• Always park your car in a well-lit area and remember where you parked it.
• When you return to your vehicle, scan the interior of your car to be sure no one is hiding inside. Check to see if you are being followed.
• If you can, carry a flashlight and whistle on your key chain and have the whistle ready to use on the way to your car. Use the flashlight if you think you see someone. Don’t be afraid to scream.
• Have your keys in hand when approaching your vehicle. You will be ready to unlock the door and will not be delayed by fumbling and looking for your keys.
• When storing items purchased at the stores, place them out of sight. The best place is in a locked trunk. If you are doing a lot of shopping, go home and unload your items and then go back out to finish shopping.
• Hide your personal and expensive items. Do not leave your purse, wallet, or cellphone in plain view.
• Don’t resist if someone tries to take any of your belongings. Don’t chase someone who robs you, they might have a weapon. Instead, call 911.
• Lock all of your doors as soon as you get in your car in case someone is behind you and ready to get in your car.
• Try to go to the bank itself if you need to get money. It is best to use a debit card so you don’t need to get cash. If you have go to an ATM for cash, check for people around and make sure it is well lit and in a safe location.
• Carry only the credit cards you need and avoid carrying large amounts of cash.
• Carry a small purse with a shoulder harness and place around your shoulders under your coat.
• If you make a purchase with your credit card and carbon copies are used, be sure to obtain the carbons or see that they are destroyed in front of you.
• Be prepared if you are shopping with your children. Place a note with each small child with their name, your name, and cellphone number. Always have a central meeting place in case someone gets separated from you. Make sure they know about talking to or taking things from strangers.
• Beware of the “good deal” scams. Things are not always what they appear to be.
• If you are purchasing toys for small children, be sure they are safe. You will be surprised what a small child can swallow or what can injure them.
• Drive defensively. Traffic is heavier during the holidays. Drivers might also have indulged in too much holiday spirits.
Pam McMurray volunteers for Southern Ohio Crime Stoppers and is a past employee of the Ross County Sheriff’s Department as TRIAD Assistant. She worked with elderly programs and crimes for a decade. She was administrator for the RUOK Program and founder and administrator of Senior Cool Down.
Scam Alert for Chillicothe
The State Fire Marshal's Office is warning people living in Chillicothe to watch out for a man who posed as a fire inspector in the area
Nourse Dealerships giving a assist to help find Bone Marrow Matches
Chillicothe Area Scam Alert
Local Moose Lodges donating to help to fight crime
Source: Chillicothe Gazette
Saturday, December 22, 2012
Common Pleas Court
• Thomas H. Anderson, Lebanon Correctional Institution, possession of a deadly weapon while under detention. After a one-day jury trial, defendant found guilty and sentenced to five years in prison consecutive to present sentence. Judge Ater
• Ginger A. Gonz, 106 Narrows Road, complicity to burglary. Sentenced to four years in prison concurrent to two other sentences, restitution of $21,935.34, court costs. On second count of complicity to burglary, sentenced to 10 months in prison concurrent with other sentences, restitution of $10, court costs. On aggravated possession of drugs charge, sentenced to two years in prison concurrent to other sentences for a total prison term of four years, two year license suspension, court costs. Judge Nusbaum.
• Curtis E. Brown, 1472 Hartwood Road, theft. Defendant pleaded guilty. Sentenced to nine months in prison, court costs. Judge Nusbaum
• Jeremy A. Current, 1800 Blue Lick Road, Londonderry, receiving stolen property. Defendant pleaded guilty. Sentenced to three years community control, must successfully complete community based correctional facility program, 100 hours community service within six months of release of community based correctional facility, aftercare as recommended, court costs. Judge Nusbaum
• Christopher M. Barker, 19 Elm St., Kingston, aggravated possession of drugs. Court found defendant eligible for intervention in lieu of conviction and set forth treatment plan that defendant must comply with for no less than a year. Defendant pleaded guilty, and court stayed proceedings pending completion of In Lieu of Conviction program. Monitoring hearing set for June 14. Judge Nusbaum
• Zachary E. Phillips, 547 Church St., four counts of forgery. Sentenced to three years community control, must successfully complete community based correctional facility program, 100 hours community service within six months of release from CBCF, complete aftercare program, court costs, jail time credit against stated sentence. Judge Nusbaum
• Keyston Davis, no address listed, trafficking in drugs. Defendant admitted to community control violations, court imposed original six-month sentence. Judge Nusbaum
• Terry L. Cash, 1104 Ginger Hill Road, two counts receiving stolen property, having weapons while under disability. Defendant’s motion for judicial release granted; sentenced to two years community control, 200 hours community service within eight months, polyabuse assessment and treatment. Judge Nusbaum
• Jackson L. Hambrick, 537 Lincoln, aggravated possession of drugs. Defendant admitted to community control violations, sentenced to community control with treatment program, 57 days in Ross County Jail with work release, drug testing, no work release Christmas Day, New Year’s Eve or New Year’s Day. Judge Ater
• Kevin E. Nungesser, no address listed, complicity to passing bad checks. Defendant pleaded guilty. Pre-sentencing investigation ordered, with disposition set for Jan. 24 and bond modified to own recognizance. Judge Ater
• Steven A. Atwood, 76 N. Brownell St., receiving stolen property. Sentenced to three years community control, 200 hours community service within eight months, court costs. Judge Nusbaum
• Kimberly J. Straub, 11138 Ohio 28, Frankfort, receiving stolen property. Defendant pleaded guilty. Pre-sentencing investigation ordered with disposition set for Jan. 31 and bond modified to $5,000 with 10 percent. Judge Nusbaum
• Jordan K. Stotridge, 250 Fairway Ave., complicity to burglary. Sentenced to four years community control, 156 days in Ross County Jail (time served), 300 hours community service within 12 months, obtain employment, court costs, restitution of $5,261.72, no alcohol or bars, random drug testing, 120 days of day reporting.
• Dustin A. Draher, Grove City, theft from an elderly person, forgery. Sentenced to three years community control, 20 days in Ross County Jail served intermittently, no alcohol or bars, random drug testing, 200 hours community service within 12 months, court costs. Judge Ater
• Jill E. Ragland, 409 W. Main St., theft, state amended indictment to allege lesser included charge of M1 theft. Defendant pleaded guilty to lesser offense. Pre-sentencing investigation ordered with disposition set for March 1. Judge Ater
• Felicia N. Detty, 4660 Maple Grove Road, burglary. Defendant entered Alford Plea. Disposition set for Feb. 1. Bond modified to own recognizance with no-contact orders for victims, co-defendants and witnesses, pre-sentencing investigation ordered. Judge Ater
• Dustin J. Gordon, Portsmouth, illegal assembly or possession of chemicals for the manufacture of drugs. Defendant pleaded guilty/ Disposition set for Jan. 31 and bond continued. Judge Ater
• Ronald D. Woolum, Chillicothe, aggravated possession of drugs, possession of cocaine, having weapons while under disability. Defendant pleaded guilty and was sentenced to two years in prison on each count concurrent to each other but consecutive to other charges. On charges of possession of cocaine, possession of heroin, receiving stolen property, carrying concealed weapons and having weapons while under disability, defendant pleaded guilty and was sentenced to one year in prison on counts 1 through 3, two years on count 5 which was merged with count 4. Counts 1 and 2 will be served consecutive to count 5 and count 3 concurrent to count five. Judge Ater
(Names, addresses and charges appear as they do in public court records.)
Ross County Sheriff's reports
WEDNESDAY Ross County Sheriff's reports
8:31 a.m. — A Roweton Youth Center student was found to have a knife longer than 3 inches in his pocket after another student reported the boy had a knife at school the previous day.The administration wants to pursue criminal charges and expulsion is recommended (Student currently suspended 10 days)
8:53 a.m. — Metal was reported pulled from a window at a home on the 3200 block of Pennyroyal Road.
9:11 a.m. — A Bayless Road, Greenfield, woman reported identity theft
12:45 p.m. — (2)shotguns and a pistol were reported taken from a home on the 400 block of Sheely Road, Frankfort.
2:59 p.m. — James A. Lisle III was arrested on a warrant.
3:37 p.m. — Items were reported taken from a yard on the first block of Northfork Drive between Dec. 15 and Wednesday.
7:09 p.m. — A County Road 550 resident reported stolen checks had been forged and uttered.
9:52 p.m. — Howard W. Smallwood was arrested on a warrant for theft.
10:06 p.m. — Medication was reported taken from a home on the 900 block of Orange Street.
Local Youth Center Student found with knife at school
Friday, December 21, 2012
Hunderds of Pills Stolen from Doctor's office in Kingston
On Tuesday, Dr. Franklin Demint reported to the Ross County Sheriff’s Office that at least five medications had been taken from his Warren Drive office.
A sheriff’s report indicated the culprit apparently gained access to the attached church via an unsecured door. The person or persons then pried open the door between the church and office. Nothing was found missing in the church, according to the report.
A family on the 200 block of Patrician Drive also reported several hundred pills taken this week. The family’s six medications had been gathered in a bag for a trip and the bag was discovered missing on Wednesday afternoon, according to a sheriff’s report.
Anyone with information can call the sheriff’s office at 740-773-1185 or anonymously call Southern Ohio Crime Stoppers at 740-773-TIPS.
Story HERE
Walker indicted for baby's death
The Pickaway County Grand Jury indicted Wayne M. “Wolf” Walker, 44, for murder, a first-degree felony; endangering children, a second-degree felony; voluntary manslaughter, a first-degree felony, with a specification for being a repeat violent offender; and involuntary manslaughter, a third-degree felony to be paired with a misdemeanor charge of felonious assault, according to the prosecutor’s office....READ MORE
Thursday, December 20, 2012
Hall Christmas Display Vandal Update
Carlisle project might have new life......
The project, and the partnership between Adena Health System and The Chesler Group, of Cleveland, received a $1.4 million tax credit from the Ohio Development Services Agency Thursday......READ MORE
Fire Closes Main St
Wednesday, December 19, 2012
Authorities nationwide ‘overwhelmed’ by school threats
Visit NBCNews.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy
Strides in the Fight against Cancer
Sheriff: Man used neighbor's unsecured Wi-Fi to download child porn
Ohio AG: Many school safety plans inadequate
A “significant number” of safety plans Ohio schools submitted to his office won’t meet best-practice guidelines, Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine said Wednesday.
The guidelines, established by DeWine’s School Safety Task Force and released Tuesday, include precautions for fires, bomb threats, medical emergencies and school shootings. Ohio law does not specify what schools must submit, DeWine said during a news conference announcing new training for teachers.
The ambiguity left some schools submitting outdated floor plans or safety plans for limited situations, he said.
“They are all over the place,” said DeWine, adding that state school and attorney general’s office officials would work with schools to get plans up to snuff.
Incorporating an armed principal or police officer into school safety plans should be decided on a school-by-school basis, but it’s a discussion worth having, DeWine said.
“If I was on a school board, … I would seriously consider having someone in that school, maybe an ex-police officer, someone who has significant training, who had access to a gun in that school, but you’d have to be careful about it. I’m not saying every school should be armed,” DeWine said.
Under Ohio law, school boards may give written authorization to anyone to bring firearms onto school premises.
DeWine’s office also is partnering with the Acting Superintendent of Public Instruction Michael Sawyers and other stakeholders to offer new training for teachers, including how to identify a potential shooter.
The first class will be Jan. 17 at the Educational Service Center of Central Ohio. The training would include information about mental health, which often gets overlooked, Sawyers said.
Information is key for teachers, who must respond to emergencies before police officers can arrive, Sawyers said.
“The real first responders in these situations are teachers,” DeWine said.
DeWine also outlined the state’s accomplishments since the school shooting in Chardon High School in February. Those included hosting a July School Safety Summit, reinforcing the submission of school safety plans, creating the School Safety Task Force and offering 14 mobile units with simulators on emergencies.
jbalmert@centralohio.com
740-328-8548
Twitter: @jbalmert
Army will seek death penalty for Washington soldier charged in massacre of 16 Afghan villagers
Army will seek death penalty for Washington soldier charged in massacre of 16 Afghan villagers - @ap
— Breaking News (@BreakingNews) December 19, 2012
Hirn Street Drug Bust
Tuesday, December 18, 2012
Independent inquiry into Benghazi attack criticizes State Department - @nytimes nyti.ms/VOyXlO
— Breaking News (@BreakingNews) December 19, 2012
Obama and Boehner appear to find common ground
Visit NBCNews.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy
Utah sixth-grader taken into custody after bringing gun to school
Utah sixth-grader taken into custody after bringing gun to school, cites mass shooting fear: apne.ws/UPEFoX -SS
— The Associated Press (@AP) December 19, 2012
Westfall addresses Facebook threat
Ross County Family Victims Of Burglaries, Arson
A response from Instagram about uproar over selling photos
We've heard you that the updates to our Privacy Policy & Terms of Service are raising a lot of questions. We'll have more to share very soon
— Instagram (@instagram) December 18, 2012
Kasich will sign law allowing guns on Capitol lot
COLUMBUS (AP) — Gov. John Kasich says he’ll sign a new law allowing guns into the Ohio Statehouse parking garage — despite calls that he veto the bill in the wake of the Connecticut school shooting.
The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer (http://bit.ly/T3jZdf) reports that the Republican governor is expected to sign the legislation this week. It will allow guns for the first time in the parking garages underneath the Statehouse in Columbus.
Guns would have to be kept in cars, and would not be allowed into the Statehouse.
Kasich said that “I’m a Second Amendment supporter and that’s not going change.” He added that there were many other issues besides gun control involved in the Newtown, Conn., massacre Friday that left 20 children and six adults dead.
——————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————— Information from: The Plain Dealer, http://www.cleveland.com
Body Found in Deer Creek
Local News: Body Found in Deer Creek bit.ly/Uy5CwR
— 1490 WBEX (@1490wbex) December 18, 2012
Pedestrian Hit on Chillicothe Street
Local News: Pedestrian Hit on Chillicothe Street bit.ly/YfIskp
— 1490 WBEX (@1490wbex) December 18, 2012