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Alcorn robbery suspect captured

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county_tishomingo_greenBy William Moore

Daily Journal

BURNSVILLE – A man wanted in connection with an Alcorn County robbery was captured early Wednesday morning in Burnsville.

George Downs, 28, of Corinth, was arrested around 6:30 a.m. on Eastport Street in Burnsville after an all-night manhunt that involved deputies from Alcorn and Tishomingo counties, the Burnsville police and fire departments and the Mississippi Highway Patrol.

“We had some folks that stayed out there all night, including the Burnsville police chief,” said Tishomingo County Sheriff Glenn Whitlock. “Some members of the Burnsville Fire Department spotted him coming out of the woods this morning. He tried to run back in there, but since it was light, they were able to catch him.”

Downs is being held in the Tishomingo County Jail and will be facing numerous charges in both counties.

“He intentionally tried to run over a Burnsville policeman, so they will likely charge him with assaulting an officer,” said Whitlock. “The initial crime was in Alcorn County, and Prentiss County will probably have some charges as well.”

Alcorn County deputies responded to a home on County Road 327 around 3 p.m. Tuesday. An elderly woman had been robbed and beaten. Alcorn officials took a male and female into custody as persons of interest, said Alcorn Sheriff’s Office investigator Reggie Anderson.

Downs eluded Alcorn authorities and led deputies on a pursuit that headed south into Prentiss County before ending in Tishomingo County just west of the Tenn-Tom Waterway near Burnsville.


Lee County escapee still on the loose

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GOLIDAY

GOLIDAY

By William Moore

Daily Journal

TUPELO – Law enforcement officials are still searching for an inmate who walked away Tuesday afternoon from the Lee County Work Center in downtown Tupelo.

Montecuz Montez Goliday, 23, of Verona, was working off fines from Tupelo Municipal Court. He was scheduled to be released from jail next month. Because of the escape, he will likely face years in jail.

According to Lee County Sheriff Jim Johnson, the work center only houses prisoners convicted of misdemeanor crimes where there was no victim of violence – things like fines, failure to pay child support and driving under the influence.

“We send them out to the landfill to work, to the courthouse to clean up and on the work bus to clean up the sides of roads,” said Johnson. “A lot of folks would rather spend the day outside working than in a cell. And they are working to pay off their fines at the rate of $20 per day.”

Inmates housed at the work center have to follow a set of rules. Johnson said Goliday had violated one of the rules – something as minor as not making his bed – and was about to be transferred back to the regular jail Tuesday.

“While he was making a call to his father, he ran out the back door,” said Johnson.

Goliday was last seen walking west on Jefferson Street around 4 p.m. Tuesday. He is described as a black male, 5 foot 6 inches tall and weighing about 135 pounds.

When captured he will face jail escape charges, a felony that carries a sentence of five years in prison. Since he was on probation as well, he could be forced to serve that original sentence, too.

“Anyone who knows where he is needs to come forward,” said Johnson. “Anyone who assists him will be facing charges of aiding and abetting a criminal.”

william.moore@journalinc.com

Tupelo man faces vehicle theft, burglary charges

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BYNUM

BYNUM

Daily Journal

A Tupelo man has been charged with motor vehicle theft and burglary of a commercial building.

Tevoris Bynum, 38, was arrested after the crimes that police say occurred Monday. Bynum is accused of stealing a vehicle and burglarizing a commercial building on South Gloster Street.

He was located by Nettleton Police and taken into custody. Bond was set at $20,000 by Lee County Justice Court Judge Sadie Holland.

Candlelight service calls for end to violence

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news_djournal_greenDaily Journal

TUPELO – A public candlelight memorial service in memory of Chris Scales will be held at 6:30 p.m. today at Gumtree Park on Front Street.

Scales, 21, died in a evening Sunday shooting at a Tupelo apartment complex. The organizers of Stop Da Violence … Kill with Kindness are organizing the event to promote peace among men young and old and all races. Participants are asked to bring a white candle and a white balloon.

The event is scheduled to go to 8:30 p.m. and will also include remarks by Tashia Beene, who lost her son Lil Anthony Beene to gun violence.

For more information, call Khaliah Smith at (662) 346-9497 or Suntanna Flemmings at (662) 523-7504 or visit the group’s Facebook page.

Officials: 5th arrest in shooting of 2 Hattiesburg officers

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other_crime_alt1By Jeff Amy

Associated Press

JACKSON – A fifth person was arrested Wednesday in connection with the fatal shooting of two Mississippi police officers last weekend, state officials said.

Abram Wade “Pete” Franklin was charged with obstruction of justice after he was questioned by Mississippi Bureau of Investigation agents, according to a statement from the state Department of Public Safety.

MBI spokesman Warren Strain declined to say what Franklin did to merit the charge. But investigators don’t believe Franklin was present for the shooting, Strain said.

Franklin, a 29-year-old Hattiesburg resident, was jailed Wednesday night awaiting an initial appearance before a judge to assign bond. Strain said that hearing could come as early as Thursday. It was unknown whether Franklin had an attorney to contact for comment.

Four others have already been charged in the Saturday shootings of Hattiesburg officers Benjamin Deen and Liquori Tate and remain in jail.

Marvin Banks, 29, is jailed without bond on two capital murder charges. His 22-year-old girlfriend, Joanie Calloway, and 26-year-old brother, Curtis Banks, are charged as accessories after the fact. A friend, 28-year-old Cornelius Clark, is charged with obstruction of justice.

Funerals will be held Thursday for the 34-year-old Deen and Saturday for the 25-year-old Tate, both in Hattiesburg.

Strain said authorities searched again Wednesday for the .40-caliber pistol that police believe Banks used but did not find it.

Tuesday night, the MBI had said it wanted to question a man and a woman seen exiting a gold Cadillac Escalade at the motel where Marvin Banks was later arrested. Investigators believe Curtis Banks drove his brother to the motel after the shooting. Strain said that thanks to news reports, investigators were able to speak to both those people Wednesday. Strain said the pair were not at the scene of the shooting and have not been charged.

Investigators say that Deen pulled over a Hyundai driven by Calloway for speeding just after sunset Saturday. He decided to search the car, in which Clark and Marvin Banks were passengers, and called Tate for backup. Strain said that after Deen asked all three to get out, Banks shot Deen in the face and Tate in the lower back. Both officers were wearing bullet-resistant vests that couldn’t protect them against the gunshots.

A judge denied bond to Marvin Banks, who is also charged with grand theft for fleeing a few blocks in a squad car after the shooting and being a felon in possession of a firearm. Banks pleaded guilty in 2010 to possessing a stolen handgun and faced unresolved drug charges at the time Deen pulled him over.

Curtis Banks’ bond is set at $100,000, but bond for a pending drug charge was revoked, meaning he can’t leave jail. Bond is set at $75,000 apiece for Calloway and Clark. All four have been assigned public defenders. Strain said all four have given statements to police.

Attorneys hope DNA tests will clear death row inmate

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MANNING

MANNING

By Emily Wagster Pettus

Associated Press

JACKSON – Attorneys for Mississippi death row inmate Willie Jerome Manning say they hope results of recent DNA tests will exonerate him and get him out of prison.

Manning, now 46, has been on death row for nearly half his life and came within hours of being put to death in May 2013 for the slayings of two college students more than 20 years earlier. The state Supreme Court indefinitely delayed the execution to allow further consideration of Manning’s capital murder convictions.

Manning was convicted in two sets of slayings in Oktibbeha County.

One conviction, in 1994, was for the killing of two Mississippi State University students, Jon Steckler and Tiffany Miller, in late 1992.

The other conviction, in 1996, was for the killing of a 90-year-old Emmoline Jimmerson and her 60-year-old daughter, Alberta Jordan, during a robbery of their Starkville apartment in 1993. The women were beaten and their throats were slashed.

In February, the state Supreme Court ordered a new trial for Manning in the slayings of Jimmerson and Jordan after justices found that investigators had not given prosecutors and defense attorneys all of their evidence about a key witness who testified against Manning. In late April, prosecutors said they would not put Manning on trial again because the witness had recanted his testimony against Manning.

In the case of the slain college students, the state Supreme Court in 2013 gave Manning’s attorneys permission to seek DNA testing of evidence. In 2014, the defense attorneys sent a rape kit, fingernail scrapings and other items to a lab for the testing.

One of the attorneys, Rob Mink of Jackson, said this month that the ultimate objective of the testing is to answer one question: “Is there any DNA attributable to Manning?”

“We’re certainly expecting that there won’t be,” Mink told The Associated Press. “What we’re really hoping for is that the test yields a profile of an individual whose DNA appears in more than one place.”

Mink said he hopes to receive test results this month – possibly as soon as Friday.

The bodies of Steckler and Miller were found in rural Oktibbeha County in December 1992. The two students been shot to death, and Miller’s car was missing. The vehicle was found the next morning. Prosecutors said Manning was arrested after he tried to sell some items belonging to the victims.

In 2013, shortly before Manning was scheduled to be executed in the slayings of Steckler and Miller, the U.S. Justice Department said there had been errors in FBI agents’ testimony about ballistics tests and hair analysis in the case. Manning’s attorneys asked the Mississippi Supreme Court to stop the execution. Hours before Manning was scheduled to be given a lethal injection, justices vote 8-1 to indefinitely delay the execution.

On April 20, Oktibbeha County Circuit Judge Lee Howard signed a court order in which prosecutors said they would not put Manning on trial again in the slayings of Jimmerson and Jordan. The order effectively dropped the charges against Manning in that case. Prosecutors’ main witness when Manning was convicted in that case, Kevin Lucious, originally testified that he had seen Manning at the apartment complex where the women lived on the day they were killed, and that Manning later talked to him about having killed the women. Lucious recanted his testimony in a sworn statement.

“Kevin Lucious further recanted his testimony and previous statement through his affidavit stating that he only signed the first statement given to Sheriff (Dolph) Bryan because District Attorney Forrest Allgood told Lucious he would not be charged with capital murder if he cooperated,” according to the April 20 court order.

Colleagues from around US attend funeral for slain officer

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Two New York police officers salute the body of Hattiesburg police officer Benjamin Deen at the Temple Baptist Church in Hattiesburg on Thursday. The outpouring of support for the family of Deen has come from across the country, Hattiesburg Mayor Johnny DuPree said.  (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)

Two New York police officers salute the body of Hattiesburg police officer Benjamin Deen at the Temple Baptist Church in Hattiesburg on Thursday. The outpouring of support for the family of Deen has come from across the country, Hattiesburg Mayor Johnny DuPree said. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)

By Rogelio Solis and Jeff Amy

Associated Press

HATTIESBURG – Several hundred law enforcement officers, including several from as far away as New York City, paid their respects Thursday to the family of a slain Mississippi police officer.

The outpouring of support for the family of Patrolman Benjamin J. Deen has come from across the country, Hattiesburg Mayor Johnny DuPree said. Services were being held at Temple Baptist Church in Hattiesburg. He was to be buried in nearby Sumrall.

DEEN

DEEN

“This means so much to this family. It shows law enforcement officers are loved by those they serve and protect. It is a shame we can’t do this before these tragic events happen,” DuPree told The Associated Press as he entered the church.

Deen, 34, and Patrolman Liquori Tate, 25, were shot and killed Saturday night during a traffic stop just north of downtown Hattiesburg.

Since then, hundreds have turned out for a memorial, vigil and visitation. Dupree said Wednesday’s visitation was extended two hours to accommodate mourners.

The hour-long service included a slide presentation of family pictures of Deen from childhood to his marriage to his wife, Robin, and raising their son and daughter.

Speakers described Deen as a good man and inspiration to those he met.

“BJ had his moral compass pointed in the right direction,” Assistant Police Chief Frank Misenhelter told the 500 mourners in the church.

“He was a protector. He protected the innocent against oppression. He protected the weak against oppression. He did his job with honor and courage. BJ was passionate about being a police officer. This was his calling. He loved what he did,” Misenhelter said.

The Rev. Dwayne Higgason, pastor of Hattiesburg’s Grace Temple Ministries who led the service, said Deen was “a wonderful man and gentle father.”

He said Deen and Tate were close.

“They worked together. The sacrificed together and they went to heaven together,” Higgason said.

Services for Tate are Saturday at West Point Baptist Church in Hattiesburg. He will be buried in Starkville.

The services for Deen were held a day after a fifth person was arrested in connection with the killings.

Abram Wade “Pete” Franklin was charged with obstruction of justice after he was questioned by Mississippi Bureau of Investigation agents, according to a statement from the state Department of Public Safety.

MBI spokesman Warren Strain said investigators don’t believe Franklin was present for the shooting.

Franklin, a 29-year-old Hattiesburg resident, was jailed Wednesday night awaiting an initial appearance before a judge to assign bond. It was unknown whether Franklin had an attorney.

Four others have already been charged in the shootings.

Marvin Banks, 29, is jailed on two capital murder charges. His 22-year-old girlfriend, Joanie Calloway, and 26-year-old brother, Curtis Banks, are charged as accessories after the fact. A friend, 28-year-old Cornelius Clark, is charged with obstruction of justice.

Investigators say Deen pulled over a Hyundai driven by Calloway for speeding just after sunset Saturday. He decided to search the car, in which Clark and Marvin Banks were passengers, and called Tate for backup. Strain said that after Deen asked all three to get out, Banks shot Deen in the face and Tate in the lower back. Both officers were wearing bullet-resistant vests that couldn’t protect them against the gunshots.

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Amy reported from Jackson.

Traffic stop leads to encounter with West Coast ‘hippie’ group

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county_union_greenBy Lynn West

New Albany Gazette

NEW ALBANY – The Union County Sheriff’s Department experienced a flashback to the Age of Aquarius this past week when it encountered a group of what might be described as counter-culture musicians passing through the area.

Sheriff Jimmy Edwards said canine officer Adam Fitts was on patrol about 1:30 a.m. Thursday on Hwy. 78 when he got behind a vehicle in which the driver seemed nervous.

He pulled the vehicle, a 1984 Ford Econoline Van, over and found inside six individuals, two dogs and a rabbit wearing a collar and leash.

The group described themselves as “The Traveling Musicans” (due to a misspelling on the part of the band’s founder) and said they were on their way from the West Coast to Birmingham to play a gig and then on to Atlanta for a music festival.

Although they did not initially give permission for a search of the van, the officer’s drug dog alerted “big time,” Fitts said.

Officers found nearly $5,000 worth of hydroponically-grown marijuana buds, LSD, what may have been hashish, drug paraphernalia and a handmade sign reading “Nugs 4 Gas?”

The group was taken into custody.

“They were very friendly and respectful,” the sheriff said. “They weren’t any trouble at all.”

In fact, the group decided to write a song about their time “detained in Mississippi” and provided officers with some examples of their music on CDs.

“One of them said he wasn’t really a hippie but he just like the lifestyle,” the officer said.

The department seized the van, $1,425 in cash and the drugs but the musicians were allowed to keep everything else and Sheriff Edwards said it appears their bond was going to be put up by an unnamed woman who had been present at the original Woodstock and wanted to help. Earlier this week they could be seen outside the jail practicing and waiting on a ride to their gig.

Arrested were:

• Eric McDonald, 21, of 1633 Front St., Oceano, Calif., charged with careless driving, possession of marijuana with intent and possession of paraphernalia.

• Preston Swimm, 19, of 7629 32nd, Antelope, Calif., charged with possession of a Schedule I drug, LSD, and possession of paraphernalia.

• Benjamin David Ream, 21, of 5387 Vicmar Dr., Bow, Wash., charged with possession of drug paraphernalia.

• Steven James Teeter, 23, of 1981 Pisgah Rd., Pottsville, Ark., charged with possession of paraphernalia.

• Thomas D. Howard, 24, of 1221 Marina Rd., Russellville, Ark., charged with possession of paraphernalia.

• Emily Dawson, 21, of Cottonwood, Ariz., charged with possession of drug paraphernalia.


City Hall, courthouse to illuminate in blue

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town_tupelo_greenDaily Journal

TUPELO – Tupelo City Hall and the Lee County Courthouse will be illuminated in blue today as a memorial to police officers who have made the ultimate sacrifice in the line of duty.

Sgt. Gale Stauffer, who was shot and killed in the line of duty on Dec. 23, 2013, is the first Tupelo Police Department officer in recent memory to lose his life while preserving the peace.

Lee County deputies who have died in the line of duty include Sheriff Harold Ray Presley in 2001 and Detention Officer Casey Ryan Harmon in 1998.

Walnut man killed in Thursday wreck

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news_accident_greenWALNUT – The Mississippi Highway Patrol is still investigating a Thursday afternoon crash in Tippah County that claimed the life of a Walnut resident.

Mississippi Highway Patrol spokesman Ray Hall said troopers responded to the crash at 4:35 p.m. on Highway 15 near Walnut. Timothy W, Jones, 57, of Walnut, was traveling northbound in a 2001 Ford F150 when he reportedly lost control of his vehicle and crashed into a ditch.

He was transported to a local hospital and was pronounced dead from the injuries.

Boston Marathon bomber sentenced to death

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TSARNAEV

TSARNAEV

By Denise Lavoie

AP Legal Affairs Writer

BOSTON – A jury sentenced Dzhokhar Tsarnaev to death Friday for the Boston Marathon bombing, sweeping aside pleas that he was just a “kid” who fell under the influence of his fanatical older brother.

Tsarnaev, 21, stood with his hands folded upon learning his fate, decided after 14 hours of deliberations over three days in the nation’s most closely watched terrorism trial since the Oklahoma City bombing case two decades ago.

The decision sets the stage for what could be the nation’s first execution of a terrorist in the post-9/11 era, though the case is likely to go through years of appeals. The execution would be carried out by lethal injection.

The 12-member jury had to be unanimous for Tsarnaev to get the death penalty. Otherwise, he would have automatically received a sentence of life in prison without parole.

Three people were killed and more than 260 wounded when two pressure-cooker bombs packed with shrapnel exploded near the finish line on April 15, 2013.

Tsarnaev was convicted last month of all 30 federal charges against him, including use of a weapon of mass destruction and the killing of an MIT police officer during the Tsarnaev brothers’ getaway attempt. Seventeen of those charges carried the possibility of the death penalty.

Tsarnaev’s chief lawyer, death penalty specialist Judy Clarke, admitted at the very start of the trial that he participated in the bombings, bluntly telling the jury: “It was him.”

But the defense argued that Dzhokhar was an impressionable 19-year-old who was led astray by his volatile and domineering 26-year-old brother, Tamerlan, who wanted to punish the U.S. for its wars in Muslim countries.

Prosecutors portrayed Dzhokhar Tsarnaev as an equal partner in the attack, saying he was so heartless he planted a bomb on the pavement behind a group of children, killing an 8-year-old boy.

To drive home their point, prosecutors cited the message he scrawled in the dry-docked boat where he was captured: “Stop killing our innocent people and we will stop.” And they opened their case in the penalty phase with a startling photo of him giving the finger to a security camera in his jail cell months after his arrest.

“This is Dzhokhar Tsarnaev – unconcerned, unrepentant and unchanged,” prosecutor Nadine Pellegrin said.

The jurors also heard grisly and heartbreaking testimony from numerous bombing survivors who described seeing their legs blown off or watching someone next to them die.

Killed in the bombing were Lingzi Lu, a 23-year-old Boston University graduate student from China; Krystle Campbell, a 29-year-old restaurant manager from Medford; and 8-year-old Martin Richard, who had gone to watch the marathon with his family. Massachusetts Institute of Technology police Officer Sean Collier was shot to death in his cruiser days later. Seventeen people lost legs in the bombings.

Tamerlan Tsarnaev died days after the bombing when he was shot by police and run over by Dzhokhar during a chaotic getaway attempt.

Tsarnaev did not take the stand, and he slouched in his seat through most of his trial, a seemingly bored look on his face. In his only flash of emotion during the months-long case, he cried when his Russian aunt took the stand.

The only evidence of any remorse on his part in the two years since the attack came from the defense’s final witness, Sister Helen Prejean, a Roman Catholic nun and staunch death penalty opponent made famous by the movie “Dead Man Walking.”

She quoted Tsarnaev as saying of the bombing victims: “No one deserves to suffer like they did.”

Tsarnaev’s lawyers also called teachers, friends and Russian relatives who described him as a sweet and kind boy who cried during “The Lion King.” The defense called him a “good kid.”

The defense argued that sparing his life and instead sending him to the federal Supermax prison in Florence, Colorado, would be a harsh punishment and would best allow the bombing victims to move on with their lives without having to read about years of death penalty appeals.

U.S. District Judge George O’Toole Jr. will formally impose the sentence at a later date during a hearing in which bombing victims will be allowed to speak. Tsarnaev will also be given the opportunity to address the court.

In deciding on the penalty, the jury had to weigh so-called aggravating factors – including the cruelty of the crime, the killing of a child, and the amount of carnage inflicted, any lack of remorse – against mitigating factors, which could include his age, the possible influence of his brother and his turbulent, dysfunctional family.

The Tsarnaevs – ethnic Chechens – lived in the former Soviet republic of Kyrgyzstan and the volatile Dagestan region of Russia, near Chechnya, before moving to the U.S. about a decade before the bombings. They settled in Cambridge, just outside Boston.

Former deputy arrested for assaulting prisoner

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DAVIS

DAVIS

By William Moore

Daily Journal

TUPELO – A former Lee County deputy found himself in jail Friday afternoon, after he was arrested and charged with assaulting an inmate.

Jerrod Davis is accused of hitting, choking and punching a restrained prisoner on May 7. After an internal investigation, Lee County Sheriff Jim Johnson fired Davis on May 8.

After a probable cause hearing Friday afternoon, Circuit Court Judge James Roberts issued an arrest warrant for Davis, charging him with simple assault. Bond was set at $1,000.

“I will not condone these types of actions,” said Johnson. “Our internal investigation led to the hearing today.”

Lee County Sheriff’s Office investigator Lt. Scotty Reedy testified that two employees witnessed Davis assault Terrence Moss, 32. A maintenance shop worker heard a loud noise and looked out to see Davis banging the prisoner’s head against the wall.

“He also saw Davis punch the prisoner in the groin area and choke him to the point he was gurgling,” said Reedy. “At the time, Moss was wearing belly chains with shackles and leg shackles.”

Another employee heard a commotion at the courthouse earlier the same day and walked in to see chairs overturned.

“She said Davis had him in a choke hold and slapped him in the face,” said Reedy.

After Davis was terminated, Reedy went to Moss and asked if he wanted to press charges.

Davis had worked for the Lee County Sheriff’s Office for six years. He transported prisoners between court appearances and the jail.

Highway 15 accident kills Houston man, injures 2 others

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news_accident_greenBy Floyd Ingram

Chickasaw Journal

HOULKA – A fiery, three-vehicle accident just north of the Highway 15 intersection with Wesley Chapel in Chickasaw County has killed a man and sent two other men to the hospital.

Chickasaw County Coroner Andy Harmon said the accident occurred about 12:10 p.m. when a pickup truck allegedly clipped a bobtruck and then collided head-on with a commercial van.

The Mississippi Highway Patrol said the deceased is Justin Thomas, 36, of Houston, who was the driver of the pickup.

“A black 2012 Dodge Ram driven by Thomas was traveling south on Highway 15,” said Sgt. Criss Turnipseed, spokesman for MHP Troop G out of Starkville. “The Dodge drifted over into the north bound lane and collided with the left rear of a northbound 2011 white International six-wheeler hauling steel driven by 49-year-old Thomas Taylor of Nettleton.

“The six-wheeler ran off of the west side of the highway and overturned,” Turnipseed said. “The Dodge then collided head on with a north bound 2004 Frito Lay van driven by 48-year-old Franklin Hollis of Vardaman.”

Turnipseed said both the Dodge and Frito Lay van caught on fire in the roadway. The accident blocked traffic on Highway 15 for more than two hours.

Hollis and Taylor were transported to NMMC Tupelo with serious injuries.

The accident remains under investigation by the MHP.

Ex-deputy charged with assault

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By William Moore

Daily Journal

TUPELO – A former Lee County deputy found himself in jail Friday afternoon, after he was arrested and charged with assaulting an inmate.

Jerrod Davis, 38, of Saltillo, is accused of hitting, choking and punching a restrained prisoner on May 7. After an internal investigation, Lee County Sheriff Jim Johnson fired Davis on May 8.

After a probable cause hearing Friday afternoon, Circuit Court Judge James Roberts issued an arrest warrant for Davis, charging him with simple assault. Bond was set at $1,000.

“I will not condone these types of actions,” said Johnson. “Our internal investigation led to the probable cause hearing today.”

Lee County Sheriff’s Office investigator Lt. Scotty Reedy testified that two employees witnessed Davis assault Terrence Moss, 32. A maintenance shop worker heard a loud noise and looked out to see Davis banging the prisoner’s head against the wall.

“He also saw Davis punch the prisoner in the groin area and choked him to the point he was gurgling,” said Reedy. “At the time, Moss was wearing belly chains with shackles and leg shackles.”

Another employee heard a commotion at the courthouse earlier the same day and walked in to see chairs overturned.

“She said Davis had him in a choke hold and slapped him in the face,” said Reedy.

After Davis was terminated, Reedy went to Moss and asked if he wanted to press charges.

Davis had worked for the Lee County Sheriff’s Office for six years. He transported prisoners between court appearances and the jail.

william.moore@journalinc.com

Houston man fatally shot Friday night in Clay County

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Daily Journalnews_crime_green

WEST POINT – The Clay County Sheriff’s Officer is investigating a shooting that left one man dead.

According to Clay County Coroner Alvin Carter, James White, 38, of Houston, died from apparent multiple gunshot wounds.

Authorities were called around 10:30 p.m. to a mobile home on Dixie Road, in the western section of the county, about a mile west of Montpelier. There, investigators found White. He was pronounced dead on the scene by Carter.

While investigators have some potential suspects, no one has been arrested.
The body has been sent to Jackson for an autopsy. Carter hopes to have preliminary results back by Tuesday.

Anyone with information about the shooting is asked to contact the sheriff’s office at 494-2896.


Hamilton man faces burglary charges

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ROBBINS

ROBBINS

Monroe Journal

The Monroe County Sheriff’s Office arrested Darrell Ray Robbins, 28, of Hamilton on May 11.

Robbins was charged with two counts of burglary of a dwelling (capias warrants). Bond was set at $20,000 for each count.

Robbins is currently being housed at Monroe County Detention Center.

McClendon appeal denied

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MCCLENDON

McCLENDON

Daily Journal

JACKSON – The State Court of Appeals denied the request by Ryan McClendon for a new trial.

A Lee County jury found McClendon guilty of an armed robbery in November 2010 on Jackson Street in Tupelo. The victim, several witnesses and even acquaintances of McClendon testified at the February 2013 trail. He was sentenced to 10 years in prison.

In January, McClendon appealed for a new trial, citing ineffectual counsel and that the evidence did not support a guilty verdict.

The appeals court denied that motion Tuesday without comment.

Police look for hit and run driver

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news_accident_greenBy William Moore

Daily Journal

TUPELO – A man is in stable condition after being run over by a car Tuesday morning near Pierce Street Elementary.

Tupelo Police Maj. Jackie Clayton said a surveillance camera showed a man parking his car in the middle of Varsity Drive near Lincoln Drive around 11 a.m. The man walked about 50 feet from his car.

“A small or mid-sized, dark-colored car was heading west and hit the man pretty hard, then drug him for 50-75 feet,” said Clayton. “The driver then turned around and headed back east.”

The victim is pretty banged up, but the injuries are not life-threatening.

Police investigators are reviewing the video for possible leads on the car, which should have damage to the right front and possibly the windshield.

Baldwyn alderman pleads not guilty

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MASSENGILL

MASSENGILL

Daily Journal

BOONEVILLE – Baldwyn alderman Ricky Massengill will get his day in court next month.

Massengill, 49, who represents Ward 4 on the city board, entered a plea of not guilty to charges of stalking and harassment Friday in Prentiss County Justice Court. According to court documents, Massengill’s trial is set for June 24.

The alderman turned himself into authorities April 15 and was booked into the Prentiss County Correctional Facility on charges of stalking and telephone harassment. He was released the same afternoon after posting a $2,000 bond.

A Prentiss County Sheriff’s Office spokesman said the charges stemmed from a domestic situation.

Law enforcement searches for Nettleton shooting suspect

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OLIVER

OLIVER

By William Moore

Daily Journal

NETTLETON – Authorities are looking for Cleveland “Woody” Oliver in connection with a Tuesday evening shooting east of Nettleton.

Lee County Sheriff Jim Johnson said Oliver, 47, of County Road 1361, was acquainted with the 36-year-old victim. The victim had been at Oliver’s house earlier in the day and left. Oliver sent text messages threatening to kill the victim and his young child, according to Johnson.

“When the victim returned to the house and got out of his car, Oliver fired several times,” said Johnson. “We are not sure how many times he was hit, but he lost a good bit of blood.”

The victim was transported to the North Mississippi Medical Center. Johnson was unsure of the victim’s condition Tuesday night.

“Oliver is a convicted felon and should be considered armed and dangerous,” said Johnson.

Anyone with information should call the Sheriff’s Office at 841-9040 or Crime Stoppers at 1-800-773-TIPS (8477).

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