Saturday, October 1, 2011

Newborn positive for drugs; mother charged


Florence, Al.
The mother of a month-old infant has been arrested after her child tested positive for drugs when she was born, authorities said Thursday.
Natalie Sisson Bowers Rochester, 25, 2929 Lauderdale 9, Florence, is charged with chemical endangerment of exposing a child to a chemical substance, police said.
Reports indicate the child was born Aug. 26 at Eliza Coffee Memorial Hospital in Florence.
Rochester
The baby tested positive for amphetamines and opiates, authorities said. The drugs are stimulants.
Police said Rochester tested positive for the same drugs when she was admitted to the hospital to deliver the baby.
Investigators said the Lauderdale County Department of Human Resources was first notified of the child’s test, followed by the Florence police.
Florence police detective Keith Johnson said an investigation was conducted with assistance from DHR officials.
He said arrest warrants were issued for Rochester on Monday.
“She was notified of the warrant and agreed to turn herself in, but that didn’t happen,” Johnson said. “For three days, she told us she was coming in. When she didn’t, we turned the arrest warrant over to the U.S. Marshals Task Force.”
Johnson said U.S. Marshals picked up Rochester on Wednesday night.
Authorities said the baby is in the custody of her father and doing well.
Rochester was taken to the Lauderdale County Detention Center, where she was released after posting a $5,000 bail.

77 year-old man charged with enticing child at Westgate Park


Dothan, Al.
Dothan police investigators have arrested a 77-year-old man on a charge that he enticed a teenage boy for immoral purposes at Westgate Park.
William Franklin Lane
 Court records indicate police charged William Franklin Lane, of Blackmon Road, with felony enticing a child for immoral purposes.
Records indicate police detectives charged Lane with enticing a 13-year-old Dothan boy at Westgate Park for the purpose of inappropriate sexual contact with a child.
Detectives from the juvenile division investigated the incident, along with a Dothan police bicycle patrol officer.
Lane was released from the Houston County Jail after he posted $10,000 bail.
Court records indicate Houston County District Court Judge Benjamin Lewis set a special condition on the bail for Lane to include a restriction against him being at any area park or playground. Lewis also restricted Lane against being around any children who are not immediate family members as a condition of his bail.
If convicted of the class C felony crime, enticing a child for immoral purposes, Lane faces one to 10 years in prison.

Henderson Murder Trial: Deputy Bonham takes stand (Deputy James Anderson's partner)

Henderson Murder Trial: Deputy Bonham takes stand (Deputy James Anderson's partner)

Opelika, Al.
A jury heard testimony Thursday from the partner of a slain Lee County sheriff’s deputy during the accused killer’s capital murder trial.
Katie Bonham

Gregory Lance Henderson, 39, of Columbus, Ga., faces capital murder charges for allegedly running over Lee County Sheriff’s Deputy James Anderson during a routine traffic stop in rural Smiths Station in 2009.
Investigator Katie Bonham took the stand to describe how Henderson attempted to flee from the officers and in the process ran over Anderson.
Henderson’s intent as he tried to flee the deputies was the focus of opening statements by prosecutors and defense attorneys. The prosecution argues Henderson deliberately ran over Anderson in his attempt to escape. The defense countered, saying Henderson, who had used methamphetamine and marijuana in the hours before the traffic stop, accidentally killed the deputy.
On Sept. 24, 2009, Bonham said she and Anderson, her training supervisor, followed Henderson after observing him turn around to possibly avoid them. Once the tag on the 1991 Honda Civic driven by Henderson came back to a 1980s-model Ford Thunderbird, Bonham said the deputies decided to pull him over. Bonham said they pulled in behind the white Honda in a residential driveway in Smiths Station along Lee Road 240.
Anderson exited out of the passenger side, drew his gun and ordered Henderson to stop as the white Honda began to reverse. Bonham said she maneuvered the patrol car to block the escape.
“He pressed the accelerator as fast as it would go and plowed over Deputy Anderson,” she said.
Bonham was joined on the witness stand on Thursday by a Lee County Sheriff’s Office dispatcher, a volunteer firefighter who responded to the calls for help and an Alabama Bureau of Investigation officer who examined the scene afterward.
Bonham began to cry as the jury was shown the dashboard tape from her patrol car. The incident is recorded in the audio of the camera.
Henderson’s car is seen pulling in front of a small house before reversing quickly and accelerating off to the right, out of view of the camera. In a muffled voice off camera, Anderson is heard commanding him to stop. Soon after, Bonham begins to shout.
“He just ran over 46 (Anderson),” Bonham said. “ … The car is laying on top of 46. Shots fired.”
In the background, the engine of Henderson’s car continues to rev. On the tape, Bonham says she fired two shots at Henderson in his car before subduing him. One missed his head, striking the car frame, and the other struck the front panel of the car, she said.
Bonham commands Henderson repeatedly “not to move.” Henderson is seen briefly in front of the patrol car as Bonham searches and questions him before putting him in the back seat.
Bonham’s voice grows frantic as she asks the homeowner for help and continues to shout at Henderson.
“Do not move. I am not kidding you. I will put a bullet in your head,” she says in the video. “You just ran over my deputy … You better not move an inch.”
Henderson is heard crying in the background and saying he will not move.
“Anderson stay with us, Anderson stay with us,” Bonham says on the tape.
The tape records the rush to find car jacks to lift the car off Anderson, and Bonham repeating the story of what happened to Anderson, who, at one point in the video, she describes as a father figure.
Volunteer firefighter Clint Knox said he arrived on the scene along Lee Road 240 to find Bonham holding Henderson at gunpoint on the ground. Knox testified he helped handcuff Henderson and assisted in the efforts to free Anderson from under the car.
“He was laying on his left side, about center of the vehicle, and he wasn’t breathing,” Knox said. “That’s when we tried to jack the vehicle.”
Knox said the car jacks kept sinking into the soft ground.
Eventually, a passing wrecker was flagged down and the edge of its hydraulic flatbed was used to free the deputy, who remained unresponsive. Knox said an ambulance had arrived by that time and CPR was performed on Anderson.
Anderson was taken to the Columbus Regional Medical Center in Columbus, Ga., where he was pronounced dead.
On the tape, which lasted for more than an hour, an unnamed man is heard advising the responding deputies to act as professionals and not lash out at the man who ran over their friend.
“I know it is hard for you, it is hard for me because he is one of our family,” the man says.
The state said it expects to finish its side of the case Friday, when the trial will resume at 9 a.m.

Hispanic students vanish from Alabama schools


BIRMINGHAM, Al. 
Hispanic students have started vanishing from Alabama public schools in the wake of a court ruling that upheld the state's tough new law cracking down on illegal immigration.
Education officials say scores of immigrant families have withdrawn their children from classes or kept them home this week, afraid that sending the kids to school would draw attention from authorities.
There are no precise statewide numbers. But several districts with large immigrant enrollments — from small towns to large urban districts — reported a sudden exodus of children of Hispanic parents, some of whom told officials they planned to leave the state to avoid trouble with the law, which requires schools to check students' immigration status.
The anxiety has become so intense that the superintendent in one of the state's largest cities, Huntsville, went on a Spanish-language television show Thursday to try to calm widespread worries.
"In the case of this law, our students do not have anything to fear," Casey Wardynski said in halting Spanish. He urged families to send students to class and explained that the state is only trying to compile statistics.
Police, he insisted, were not getting involved in schools.
Victor Palafox graduated from a high school in suburban Birmingham last year and has lived in the United States without documentation since age 6, when his parents brought him and his brother here from Mexico.
"Younger students are watching their lives taken from their hands," said Palafox, whose family is staying put.
In Montgomery County, more than 200 Hispanic students were absent the morning after the judge's Wednesday ruling. A handful withdrew.
In tiny Albertville, 35 students withdrew in one day. And about 20 students in Shelby County, in suburban Birmingham, either withdrew or told teachers they were leaving.
Local and state officials are pleading with immigrant families to keep their children enrolled. The law does not ban anyone from school, they say, and neither students nor parents will be arrested for trying to get an education.
But many Spanish-speaking families aren't waiting around to see what happens.
A school worker in Albertville — a community with a large poultry industry that employs many Hispanic workers — said Friday that many families might leave town over the weekend for other states. About 22 percent of the community's 4,200 students are Hispanic.
"I met a Hispanic mother in the hallway at our community learning center this morning, where enrollment and withdrawal happens. She looked at me with tears in her eyes. I asked, 'Are you leaving?' She said 'Yes,' and hugged me, crying," said the worker, who spoke on condition of anonymity because she was not an authorized spokeswoman.
In Russellville, which has one of the largest immigrant populations in the state because of its poultry plants, overall school attendance was down more than 2 percent after the ruling, and the rate was higher among Hispanic students.
There's "no firm data yet, but several students have related to their teachers that they may be moving soon," said George Harper, who works in the central office.
Schools in Baldwin County, a heavily agricultural and tourist area near the Gulf Coast, and in Decatur in the Tennessee Valley also reported sudden decreases in Hispanic attendance.
The law does not require proof of citizenship to enroll, and it does not apply to any students who were enrolled before Sept. 1. While most students are not affected, school systems are supposed to begin checking the status of first-time enrollees now.
The Obama administration filed court documents Friday announcing its plans to appeal the ruling that upheld the law.
The state has distributed to schools sample letters that can be sent to parents of new students informing them of the law's requirements for either citizenship documents or sworn statements by parents.
In an attempt to ease suspicions that the law may lead to arrests, the letter tells parents immigration information will be used only to gather statistics.
"Rest assured," the letter states, "that it will not be a problem if you are unable or unwilling to provide either of the documents."

My neice's car wreck Columbus Ga after leaving our house.

By Eddie George- Owner of  The Wiregrass News

My niece, Ashley Brookins ,Had a bad wreck last Night on veterans highway in Columbus, Ga.

After leaving our house she was heading home, a bad tire caused her to lose control and go off the road and hitting a tree. She was bruised up bad but was not seriously injured. She was treated by paramedics on scene and was released.






Friday, September 30, 2011

OZARK POLICE- WHO HAS BEEN BAD




September 29, 2011 – THURSDAY:
@ 10:01 am. Identity Theft . Cobridge Communications. Victim (Charlene Carson) stated suspect (Hazel L. Carson) used her personal information to have cable installed at suspect’s residence.

@ 12:23 pm. Harassment. 1001 Hwy 231. Victim (Kyndra Young) stated suspect (Morgan L. Edgar) started a verbal altercation with her. 

@ 2:06 pm. Failure to Pay for Gasoline. E. Broad St. Complainant (Brenda Adams) stated an unknown suspect pumped gas and left the premises without paying

@ 2:38 pm. Missing Person. Ozark. Complainant (Temple S. Stancil) stated she has not been able to reach (Vincent Stewart) for five days. Stewart has not been at home or work during that period.
@ 4:08 pm. Theft of Property 3rd. County Rd 401. Victim (Elizabeth P. Davis) stated an unknown person stole her mailbox.

@ 7:07 pm. Failure to Pay for Gasoline. E. Broad St. Complainant (Penelope A. Kline) stated an unknown suspect pumped gas and left the premises without paying. 

@ 9:33 pm. Domestic Dispute. Campground Rd. (Jennifer S. Wilson) and (Michael W. Wilson) were arguing over personal matters.

ARRESTS: NONE

Dothan police arrests bicyclist female for cocaine


Early this morning a Dothan Police Officer made contact with a woman creating a roadway hazard by riding a bicycle on the road with no lights or reflective gear. As the officer approached the woman, he observed her throw a cup from her hand and drop the bicycle. The officer did not recover the cup but believed it may have contained alcohol as the suspect was highly intoxicated. After dropping the bicycle, the suspect then walked toward the patrol vehicle and threw something away from the car. The officer detained the suspect and recovered the object, a clear plastic bag containing cocaine. Narcotics Investigators responded to seize the evidence and arrested Felicia Franklin on narcotics charges.


·        Felicia Franklin, black female, 32 years of age, of Doris Lane was arrested and charged with Unlawful Possession of a Controlled substance with bond being established later today.

Department responded to a robbery of a person in the 800 block of Meridian Stree


On September 29, 2011 the Dothan Police Department responded to a robbery of a person in the 800 block of Meridian Street just after 9:00 p.m. Investigators were called to the scene where they learned two suspects approached and assaulted the victim intending to rob him. Investigators say the victim was transported to a local hospital where he received treatment for moderate injuries received during the robbery. Within a short period of time, night shift patrolmen located and arrested both suspects. The case will now be closed following the arrests.

·        Rodney Griffin, black male, 19 years of age, of Valley Forge Road was arrested and charged with First Degree Robbery with bond being established later today.

·        Rashad Griffin, black male, 19 years of age, of Valley Forge Road was arrested and charged with First Degree Robbery with bond being established later today.


Thursday, September 29, 2011

Armed robbery at Discount Tobacco Outlet, 4183 West Main Street SUBJECTS ARRESTED




Press Release
September 29, 2011

On September 17, 2011 the Dothan Police Department responded to an armed robbery at Discount Tobacco Outlet, 4183 West Main Street just after 7:00 p.m. Investigators have worked tirelessly on this investigation and say they have now identified and arrested three suspects wanted for this crime. The ongoing investigation has revealed Timothy Davis entered the store armed with a large knife and instructed the clerk to stay in the restroom. Davis then blocked the restroom door and let a second suspect, Joseph Speer into the building. The suspects took cash and miscellaneous items and left the store. The clerk was then able to exit the bathroom unharmed and call police.

Investigators say both Davis and Speer have been arrested and say a third arrest was made after investigators learned an additional suspect was responsible for planning the robbery. Police say Jessica Mims, a former employee of the business, provided information to Davis and Speer on the whereabouts of the money and other pertinent details about the business.

·        Timothy Roy Davis, white male, 21 years of age, of Slocomb, Alabama was arrested and charged with First Degree Robbery with a $175,000 bond.

·        Joseph Speer, white male, 22 years of age, of Slocomb, Alabama was arrested and charged with First Degree Robbery with a $175,000 bond.

·        Jessica Marie Mims, white female, 24 years of age, of Slocomb, Alabama was arrested and charged with Conspiracy to Commit Robbery with a $50,000 bond.




 


Gregory J. Benton
Chief of Police

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Dothan Police Department responded to a burglary in progress in the 700 block of Hutchins Street



On September 24, 2011 the Dothan Police Department responded to a burglary in progress in the 700 block of Hutchins Street. According to investigators, the home was occupied by the victim who awoke to see the suspect in the home. When confronted, the suspect immediately fled, running out of the front door. The suspect was arrested and charged in this case.

Investigators have now connected Cummings with a second burglary, also committed in September in the 800 block of Hutchins Street. Cummings was arrested yesterday for the additional burglary.

·        Hassan Cummings, black male, 31 years of age, of Chinook Street was arrested September 24th and charged with Second Degree Burglary. On September 26th Cummings was charged with an additional count of Second Degree Burglary with a $10,000 bond for each charge.