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Riverside, Iowa, dog breeder Loren Yoder pleads guilty to animal abuse
New Post has been published on https://petn.ws/c7wL8
Riverside, Iowa, dog breeder Loren Yoder pleads guilty to animal abuse
A Riverside breeder who had 131 dogs removed by authorities last year has been sentenced to probation for animal neglect. Loren Yoder, 63, owned of Sunset Valley Farm, pleaded guilty to five counts of animal neglect with injury, each a serious misdemeanor after a state inspector discovered the dogs in “prolonged pain and suffering during […]
See full article at https://petn.ws/c7wL8 #DogNews #Abuse, #Animal, #AnimalNeglect, #AnimalProductsU0026Services, #AnimalWelfare, #Animals, #Canine, #City, #County, #Courthouse, #Crime, #CrimeU0026Justice, #Department, #Dogs, #Enforcement, #Ia, #IASharingNewsDESICPC, #ICPC, #Iowa, #IowaCity, #Johnson, #JohnsonCounty, #JohnsonCountyCourthouseIA, #JohnsonCountySheriffSDepartment, #Justice, #Law, #LawEnforcement, #Legal, #Local, #LocalNews, #Mills, #Negative, #Neglect, #News, #OfThe, #Overall, #OverallNegative, #Products, #Puppy, #PuppyMills, #Services, #Sharing, #SheriffS, #U0026, #Violence, #ViolenceU0026Abuse, #Welfare
#abuse#animal#Animal Neglect#Animal Products u0026 Services#animal-welfare#animals#canine:#city#county#courthouse#crime#Crime u0026 Justice#department#dogs#enforcement#Ia#IA Sharing News - DES - ICPC#ICPC#iowa#Iowa City#johnson#Johnson County#Johnson County Courthouse (IA)#Johnson County Sheriff's Department#justice#law#Law enforcement#legal#local#Local News
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Sex Sting Nabs New Whiteland Church Elder
“Nick from Bargersville, happily married, two children. Work at a local church, and a seminary student!” – Nicholas Jackson, accused sex offender WWJD? Probably not attempt to hook up with an underage girl, like this elderof Grace Bible Church in New Whiteland allegedly did. Law enforcement officials say Nicholas Jackson, 39, began texting an undercover detective posing as a 14-year-old girl in…
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#Bargersville#Edinburgh Police Department#Franklin Police Department#Johnson County Sheriff&039;s Office#New Whiteland#Nicholas Jackson
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Iowa City, Iowa, US
A pro-Palestine encampment launched at 7am Monday May 6th, but half an hour later, UIPD tore down the encampment.
later, Oliver writes an update about how Four homes so far have been visited by police officers:
FULL TRANSCRIPT: X user @/Ollie_XVX writes in three successive posts from 1045 - 1108; the updated posts were from 4pm later in the day, timestamps included: 1045: "IOWA CITY: A pro Palestine encampment at University Of Iowa launched at 7am, with around 25 campers and 20 tents. At 730am UIPD came and said campers has 30minutes to disperse, 15 minutes later the cops moved in on the protest and tore down tents with people in them."
Attached to the first post is a photo of the torn down encampment, with at least two officers in the background and one in the foreground. The thread continues:
1053: "One anonymous Protestor said a UIPD officer tried to dive into their tent and in the process dropped a full magazine of 9mm ammo on the ground. They say cops attempted to grab protestors, but all protestors were able to disperse."
1108: "Protesters say cops were threatening that state patrol was going to come arrest them. Iowa City Police, University Police, Johnson County Sheriff Department, and State Patrol all responded to this extremely chill civil disobedience".
1648: "UPDATE: After the events of this morning, activists are reporting to me that plainclothes men with walkies and polos have come to their homes, opened doors w/o knocking & yelling. Trying to get them to sign papers saying they won’t “loiter” and refusing to identify themselves."
1713: "One person who reached out saying this happened to them said they flashed badges when asked, but didn’t see exactly which badges they were."
1744: "According to reports I’m getting, these are confirmed police officers that are coming to people they believe to be involved in the action’s homes. At least 4 homes have been visited thus far."
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Christina Leonard was only 33 years-old when her life was brutally taken in July 2019.
The young woman was a resident of Tuscon, Arizona. She was also five months pregnant at the time of her death. Christina and her loved ones were looking forward to the arrival of her baby girl. Unfortunately, both Christina and her unborn child were killed on July 3rd, 2019.
It was around 11:00 AM when a Pima County resident driving by the 4900 block of Cactus Wren Avenue spotted a woman lying on the ground. The resident called 911 and reported seeing "a woman that appeared to have collapsed." Police responded to the scene and found that the woman was actually deceased.
Said woman was soon identified as Christina Leonard. Her body was found on the ground next to her vehicle. Christina had suffered obvious signs of trauma, and her death was subsequently classified as a murder.
It was eventually determined that Christina was last heard from around 9:30 AM on the morning of the murder. By approximately 11:00 AM, her body was found. Christina was killed within that 90-minute timeframe, during which, according to investigators, "she may have traveled to meet someone."
Authorities have never revealed the exact cause of Christina's death. In 2022, Pima County Detective Lisa Johnson told reporters that they declined to disclose this information because it's "information only the suspect would know." However, Johnson did share that the investigators believe Christina knew her killer.
Details about the investigation have otherwise been kept under wraps. While dozens of warrants have reportedly been served, detectives have not released any names of potential suspects or persons of interest. It's been noted that Christina was a private person, which has made her murder even more difficult to solve. As such, both investigators and Christina's family members have appealed to the public in hopes that someone with information that could solve the case will come forward.
If you have any information that could help solve the murder of Christina Leonard, please contact the Pima County Sheriff’s Department at (520) 351-4900 or submit an anonymous tip online.
#christina leonard#murder case#unsolved#unsolved murder#unsolved mystery#arizona#true crime#true crime research#tcoriginal#2019
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Anthony Weber (July 30, 2001 - February 4, 2018) was fatally shot by Los Angeles County Sheriff’s deputies in Westmont. He was known as “A.J.” to his friends and family, he was born to John Weber and Demetra Johnson. He excelled at baseball, basketball, and football, and, with his father’s encouragement, joined ROTC at his high school. He and his father spent time together working on cars. His girlfriend had given birth to their daughter.
On the night he was killed, sheriff’s deputies responded to a 911 caller who reported a Black man in a black T-shirt had pointed a gun at the car in which he was riding. The two deputies encountered him near an apartment building and initiated a foot pursuit when the teenager turned and ran. Both deputies reported seeing a gun. Upon reaching the apartment courtyard, according to the account provided by the law enforcement officers, turned to face the deputies and reached for the waistband of his pants. One deputy fired 13 shots, striking the teenager multiple times in his upper body. He was pronounced dead at the scene.
No firearm was recovered, leading Captain Chris Bergner of the sheriff’s department to speculate one may have been removed by one or more of the estimated thirty residents of the apartment complex who assembled in the courtyard after hearing the shots. His family disputed the account, noting that the teenager did not own a gun and that the scene had been secured quickly by law enforcement officers.
A public meeting was held by the Civilian Oversight Commission, a board appointed by the City of Los Angeles to monitor the sheriff’s department. More than one hundred attendees, including his father and older brother, sought information about the incident. Tempers flared at the meeting when officials from the sheriff’s department asserted he was a gang member, a charge his father denied.
His parents sued Los Angeles County, alleging the deputies used excessive force and violated the civil rights of their son. Los Angeles County officials announced a $3.75 million settlement in the case. A trust would be established for his infant daughter. #africanhistory365 #africanexcellence #blm
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A Missouri inmate convicted of ambushing and killing a St. Louis area police officer he blamed in the death of his younger brother was scheduled to be executed Tuesday, barring a last-minute intervention.
Kevin Johnson’s legal team doesn’t deny that he killed Officer William McEntee in 2005, but contended in an appeal to the Missouri Supreme Court that he was sentenced to death in part because he is Black. But in a 5-2 ruling late Monday, the state Supreme Court denied a stay.
The U.S. Supreme Court also declined a stay request last week, and Gov. Mike Parson on Monday announced he would not grant clemency.
“The violent murder of any citizen, let alone a Missouri law enforcement officer, should be met only with the fullest punishment state law allows,” Parson, a Republican and a former county sheriff, said in a statement. “Through Mr. Johnson’s own heinous actions, he stole the life of Sergeant McEntee and left a family grieving, a wife widowed, and children fatherless. Clemency will not be granted.”
It wasn’t immediately clear if other appeals were planned. A message left early Tuesday with Johnson’s lawyer was not immediately returned.
Johnson, 37, faces execution Tuesday evening at the state prison in Bonne Terre. He would be the second Missouri man put to death in 2022 and the 17th nationally.
McEntee, 43, was a 20-year veteran of the police department in Kirkwood, a St. Louis suburb. The father of three was among the officers sent to Johnson’s home on July 5, 2005, to serve a warrant for his arrest. Johnson was on probation for assaulting his girlfriend, and police believed he had violated probation.
Johnson saw officers arrive and awoke his 12-year-old brother, Joseph “Bam Bam” Long, who ran to a house next door. Once there, the boy, who suffered from a congenital heart defect, collapsed and began having a seizure.
Johnson testified at trial that McEntee kept his mother from entering the house to aid his brother, who died a short time later at a hospital.
That same evening, McEntee returned to the neighborhood to check on unrelated reports of fireworks being shot off. A court filing from the Missouri attorney general’s office said McEntee was in his car questioning three children when Johnson shot him through the open passenger-side window, striking the officer’s leg, head and torso. Johnson then got into the car and took McEntee’s gun.
The court filing said Johnson walked down the street and told his mother that McEntee “let my brother die” and “needs to see what it feels like to die.” Though she told him, “That’s not true,” Johnson returned to the shooting scene and found McEntee alive, on his knees near the patrol car. Johnson shot McEntee in the back and in the head, killing him.
Johnson’s lawyers have previously asked the courts to intervene for other reasons, including a history of mental illness and his age — 19 — at the time of the crime. Courts have increasingly moved away from sentencing teen offenders to death since the Supreme Court in 2005 banned the execution of offenders who were younger than 18 at the time of their crime.
But a broader focus of appeals has been on alleged racial bias. In October, St. Louis Circuit Judge Mary Elizabeth Ott appointed a special prosecutor to review the case. The special prosecutor, E.E. Keenan, filed a motion earlier this month to vacate the death sentence, stating that race played a “decisive factor” in the death sentence.
Ott declined to set aside the death penalty.
Keenan told the state Supreme Court that former St. Louis County Prosecutor Bob McCulloch’s office handled five cases involving the deaths of police officers during his 28 years in office. McCulloch sought the death penalty in the four cases involving Black defendants, but did not seek death in the one case where the defendant was white, the file said.
Assistant Attorney General Andrew Crane responded that “a fair jury determined he deserves the death penalty.”
McCulloch does not have a listed phone number and could not be reached for comment.
Johnson’s 19-year-old daughter, Khorry Ramey, had sought to witness the execution, but a state law prohibits anyone under 21 from observing the process. Courts have declined to step in on Ramey’s behalf.
The U.S. saw 98 executions in 1999 but the number has dropped dramatically in recent years. Missouri already has two scheduled for early 2023. Convicted killer Scott McLaughlin is scheduled to die on Jan. 3, and convicted killer Leonard Taylor’s execution is set for Feb. 7.
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Videos: Seven Dead, Six Critically Injured in Sapelo Island Ferry Dock Collapse
Seven people have been confirmed dead after a ferry dock gangway collapsed in Sapelo Island, Georgia, on Saturday. It is also reported that about six individuals were critically injured and are receiving treatment at a hospital. According to AP News reports, the disaster occurred in the afternoon, before 4 p.m., during the island's annual Cultural Day event, a celebration honoring the Gullah-Geechee community, descendants of Black slaves. It is estimated that over 600 people visited Sapelo Island for the event. This small settlement, founded after the Civil War by former slaves, is home to a few dozen Black residents. The video below shows what the ferry dock looked like shortly before the collapse. https://twitter.com/TabZLIVE/status/1847804165478642013 The incident prompted a massive emergency response, involving the U.S. Coast Guard, local sheriff's and fire departments, and the DNR. Helicopters and boats equipped with side-scanning sonar were deployed in the search and rescue efforts. There are no reports indicating a collision that might have caused the aluminum gangway, which connects the outer ferry dock to the shore, to suddenly collapse. According to Walter Rabon, Commissioner of the Georgia Department of Natural Resources (DNR), there were up to 40 people on the structure when it failed, resulting in at least 20 individuals plunging into the water below. https://twitter.com/VanBrimmerAJC/status/1848042557093159385 All seven fatalities were visitors to Sapelo Island, with ages ranging from 73 to 93 years old. A spokesperson confirmed to CNN that among the deceased was Charles L. Houston, a 77-year-old chaplain for the DNR, Georgia State Patrol, and Georgia Bureau of Investigation. Other people confirmed dead are: - Jacqueline Crews Carter, 75 - Cynthia Gibbs, 74 - William Johnson, Jr., 73 - Carlotta McIntosh, 93 - Queen Welch, 76 - Isaiah Thomas, 79 Commissioner Rabon described the collapse as a "catastrophic failure" of the gangway, which was installed in November 2021. He noted that such aluminum structures typically require minimal maintenance and undergo almost daily inspections. The last formal inspection was conducted in December 2023 by the McIntosh County-based Crescent Equipment Company.Following the incident, a team of engineers and construction specialists has been dispatched to investigate the cause of the collapse. The DNR, which manages Sapelo Island and operates the ferry service, has secured the gangway and is overseeing the ongoing investigation. Read the full article
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Michigan father of 2 shot and killed after dispute with neighbor over mulch: 'A gentle soul'
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Michigan father of 2 shot and killed after dispute with neighbor over mulch: 'A gentle soul'
A Michigan father of two was shot and killed Saturday after a confrontation with his neighbor turned deadly, police said. The violence unfolded just before noon in a quiet residential neighborhood in Canton. One neighbor told FOX 2 the neighborhood had never had an episode like this in the more than three decades he had been living there. Canton police officers were dispatched to the 200 block of Cornell Street in response to an apparent confrontation between two neighbors. Responding officers found the victim with gunshot wounds. He was transported to a local hospital, where he died. The shooting suspect, later identified as 47-year-old Devereaux Christopher Johnson, barricaded himself inside his home before eventually surrendering to police. “This was a senseless act of violence toward the victim,” Canton Police Chief Chad Baugh said in a statement. “The Canton Police Department sends our deepest condolences to the victim’s family, and to the neighbors who may have witnessed this tragic event.” NORTH CAROLINA SHERIFF HUNTING ‘CHRISTMAS DAY KILLER’ KNOWS HIM PERSONALLY, WARNS HE HAS ‘NOTHING TO LOSE’The victim was identified as Nathan Morris, a 35-year-old engineer at Ford Motors and a father of two. A GoFundMe page set up by Morris’ family described him as a “family man first and foremost [who] was active in the community and ran for the Canton School Board recently.” Michigan RNC Committeewoman Hima Kolanagireddy said Morris got involved in politics when Ford mandated COVID-19 vaccines. She said she “worked closely with him as the former Chair of the MI-6th CDRC, and as a member of the Wayne 6th CDRC, of which he was a secretary.” “On Saturday, while taking a stroll with his family in his neighborhood, his daughter touched the mulch of one of the neighbors. The neighbor took a gun out and started threatening the family,” Kolanagireddy said. “Nathan sent his family home and said that he would try and defuse the situation, but instead was shot and killed.”Kolanagireddy described Morris as “a gentle soul” who was “near perfect.” “He would do no harm and think no harm,” she wrote. Johnson was arraigned Monday in the 35th District Court on first-degree murder and being a felon in possession of a weapon. Judge James A. Plakas remanded Johnson to be held at the Wayne County jail without bond. Johnson’s next court hearing is scheduled for Aug. 23.
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State, defense spar over Ambler video’s destruction
2 accused of taking steps to ensure ‘Live PD’ footage of death wasn’t seen
Whose fault was it that video from the “Live PD” television show that showed the in-custody death of Javier Ambler II after a traffic chase in March 2019 was not preserved for investigators?
A Williamson County prosecutor said in opening statements Tuesday at a trial that former Williamson County Sheriff Robert Chody and Assistant County Attorney Jason Nassour were at fault for not saving the video and worked to prevent its release.
“This is a Williamson County debacle,” said prosecutor Mike Waldman.
Chody’s defense attorney said the blame was with the Austin Police Department and the Travis County district attorney’s office for not making sure the video was preserved.
“The reason that we are here is that Robert Chody and Jason Nassour are the fall guys,” said E.G. Morris.
Nassour’s attorney, Keith Hampton, did not make an opening statement, saying he was going to reserve the right to make one later.
Chody and Nassour are accused of taking steps to ensure that the “Live PD” video of Ambler’s death in 2019 was not seen by investigators or the public.
They are charged with tampering with evidence and conspiracy to tamper with evidence, both third-degree felonies punishable by up to 10 years in prison.
Ambler was driving home from a poker game in the early morning hours of March 28, 2019, when two Williamson County sheriff’s deputies – who both had “Live PD” crews in their patrol cars – started chasing him after he failed to dim his headlights.
Ambler crashed his car several times before it became disabled in North Austin after a 22-minute chase that started in Williamson County and ended in Travis County.
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J.J. Johnson and Zach Camden used Tasers four times on the 400-pound former football player as he cried that he had a heart condition, could not breathe and was not resisting arrest, according to a body camera video from an Austin police officer at the scene.
Ambler, a 40year-old former postal worker and the father of two sons, died a few minutes later.
Chody and Nassour arrived at the scene after Ambler died.
Information on Ambler’s death was not made public until more than a year after he died.
Producers canceled “Live PD” two days after the details of the death of Ambler, who was Black, were revealed by the American-Statesman and KVUE-TV in June 2020, sparking national headlines more than a year after the fatal incident.
The cancellation also came amid protests across the country over another in-custody death of a Black man, George Floyd, in Minneapolis.
The steps that Nassour and Chody took to ensure the “Live PD” footage was never seen included a provision in a contract made after Ambler’s death with Big Fish Entertainment Co., which produced the show, that any video be destroyed no later than 30 days after it was shot, according to an indictment filed in the case in June.
Waldman told the jury Tuesday that Chody never took statements from “Live PD” witnesses at the scene of Ambler’s death and that Chody allowed the show’s video from the scene to be taken away and sent to New York.
“No law enforcement ever saw that video,” said Waldman.
He said the Williamson County deputies involved in using their stun guns on Ambler were not wearing their own body cameras but were wearing cameras provided by “Live PD.”
A grainy black and white dashcam camera from one of the deputy’s patrol cars did show two professional cameramen within 5 feet of the incident “showing every single act that happened between Johnson and Ambler.”
In the months after Ambler’s death, Waldman said, a Travis County investigator tried repeatedly to get contact information for the “Live PD” television crew from Williamson County investigators but couldn’t obtain it until September 2019.
The video was destroyed in June 2019, according to a recent indictment.
Another investigator sent a subpoena to New York for the video but never could get the right address, so no one received it, the prosecutor said.
He also said that at the time of Ambler’s death, Williamson County did not have a contract with “Live PD” to film the show, so Chody got commissioners to agree on June 4, 2019, to a new contract that was backdated to include the date of Ambler’s death.
After the Statesman reported on Ambler’s death more than a year after incident, Waldman said, Nassour wrote to one of the “Live PD” producers that the show needed “to change the message and say there was no recording, it never existed and your crew said their batteries ran out.”
“Nassour knew that wasn’t true,” Waldman said.
Morris said in his opening statement that Chody did not take statements from “Live PD” witnesses at the scene because Austin police had taken over the investigation.
He said that when Chody and Nassour negotiated a new contract with “Live PD” after Ambler died, they did not put the clause in the contract that said all raw footage should be destroyed within 30 days unless a judge or other authorities requested that it be retained.
The clause originally said the footage could be destroyed within 90 days but the lawyer from the Williamson County Commissioner’s Court changed it to 30 days, Morris said.
The reason the destruction clause was put into the contract was to prevent “Live PD” from later selling any raw footage from Williamson County that might make the county look bad, Morris said.
He said the reason the contract was backdated to include the date of Ambler’s death was so the county could ensure it had insurance coverage.
He said a deputy at the scene had written down the names and phone numbers of “Live PD” crew members but lost the notes at the scene.
Austin police also listened to some body camera footage and got phone numbers of “Live PD” employees at the scene, called and left messages.
“How is it that the detective couldn’t find who these people (”Live PD” crew) were?” Morris asked.
The Austin Police Department never asked Chody for the names of the “Live PD” crew, Morris said.
He said an assistant Travis County district attorney, seeking the video a few days after Ambler’s death, did not know how to issue a subpoena for it, Morris said.
“Had he issued a proper subpoena there is no indication at all that (”Live PD” production company) Big Fish would have destroyed this video,” the defense attorney said.
Chody told Big Fish Entertainment that he was finished with his internal affairs investigation in June 2019, but he said there was still a criminal investigation, Morris said.
“He (Chody) did not say it was OK to destroy the video or recycle it,” Morris said.
The trial could last at least two weeks because prosecutors expect to call more than 40 witnesses, according to a court document.
Dan Abrams, the host of the “Live PD” show, is expected to testify in the trial after he said in 2019 that Chody requested the show retain the Ambler video pending an investigation.
“Live PD” retained the video for three months, Abrams said, until June 2019, when Chody informed “Live PD” attorneys that their investigation was complete using the bodycam video that they had, Abrams said.
Defense attorneys have argued that federal law prevented Chody and Nassour from seizing video at the scene, and District Judge Karen Sage agreed, saying the state could not discuss with jurors their actions at the scene without her approval.
Johnson and Camden, the two Williamson County deputies involved in using Tasers on Ambler, were found not guilty of manslaughter in March
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UPDATE: Victim in fatal Hwy. 29 crash identified
An update on a July 25 crash on Hwy. 29:
Wausau Pilot & Review Police have identified the 63-year-old man who died last week in a crash east of Wausau as Keith C. Johnson, of Rhinelander. The single-vehicle crash happened at about 11 a.m. on July 25. Initial reports suggested two vehicles were involved in the crash, but the latest release from the Marathon County Sheriff’s Department specifies only one vehicle was involved. A portion…
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Riverside, Iowa, dog breeder Loren Yoder pleads guilty to animal abuse
New Post has been published on https://petn.ws/AKo7w
Riverside, Iowa, dog breeder Loren Yoder pleads guilty to animal abuse
A Riverside breeder who had 131 dogs removed by authorities last year has been sentenced to probation for animal neglect. Loren Yoder, 63, owned of Sunset Valley Farm, pleaded guilty to five counts of animal neglect with injury, each a serious misdemeanor after a state inspector discovered the dogs in “prolonged pain and suffering during […]
See full article at https://petn.ws/AKo7w #DogNews #Abuse, #Animal, #AnimalNeglect, #AnimalProductsU0026Services, #AnimalWelfare, #Animals, #Canine, #City, #County, #Courthouse, #Crime, #CrimeU0026Justice, #Department, #Dogs, #Enforcement, #Ia, #IASharingNewsDESICPC, #ICPC, #Iowa, #IowaCity, #Johnson, #JohnsonCounty, #JohnsonCountyCourthouseIA, #JohnsonCountySheriffSDepartment, #Justice, #Law, #LawEnforcement, #Legal, #Local, #LocalNews, #Mills, #Negative, #Neglect, #News, #OfThe, #Overall, #OverallNegative, #Products, #Puppy, #PuppyMills, #Services, #Sharing, #SheriffS, #U0026, #Violence, #ViolenceU0026Abuse, #Welfare
#abuse#animal#Animal Neglect#Animal Products u0026 Services#animal-welfare#animals#canine:#city#county#courthouse#crime#Crime u0026 Justice#department#dogs#enforcement#Ia#IA Sharing News - DES - ICPC#ICPC#iowa#Iowa City#johnson#Johnson County#Johnson County Courthouse (IA)#Johnson County Sheriff's Department#justice#law#Law enforcement#legal#local#Local News
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The story of Richard and Mildred Loving, an interracial couple, whose challenge of their anti-miscegenation arrest for their marriage in Virginia led to a legal battle that would end at the US Supreme Court. Credits: TheMovieDb. Film Cast: Richard Loving: Joel Edgerton Mildred Loving: Ruth Negga Grey Villet: Michael Shannon Sheriff Brooks: Marton Csokas Bernie Cohen: Nick Kroll Frank Beazley: Bill Camp Lola Loving: Sharon Blackwood Raymond Green: Alano Miller Garnet Jetter: Terri Abney Judge Bazile: David Jensen Phil Hirschkop: Jon Bass Theoliver Jeter: Christopher Mann Musiel Byrd-Jeter: Winter-Lee Holland Deputy: Michael Abbott Jr. Percy Fortune: Chris Greene Virgil: Will Dalton Chet Antieau: Matt Malloy Laura: Andrene Ward-Hammond Alex: D.L. Hopkins Hope Ryden: Jennifer Joyner Cousin Davis: Lance Lemon Cousin Gerald: Marquis Adonis Hazelwood Older Sydney: Brenan Young Older Donald: Dalyn Cleckley Older Peggy: Quinn McPherson Middle Sidney: Jevin Crochrell Middle Donald: Jordan Williams Jr. Middle Peggy: Georgia Crawford Toddler Sydney: Micah Claiborne Baby Sydney: Devin Cleckley Infant Sydney: Pryor Ferguson Clara – Cashier: Karen Vicks Reporter #1: Scott Wichmann Construction Worker: Benjamin Loeh Court Secretary: Bridget Gethins Store Pedestrian: Mark Huber Drag Race Spectator: James Matthew Poole Secretary: Coley Campany Secretary: Sheri Lahris Construction Worker: Jordan Dickey Telephone Man: Coby Batty Drag Race Spectator / Bar Patron: Chris Condetti Richard’s Racing Crew: Logan J. Woolfolk County Clerk: Robert Haulbrook Bricklayer: Keith Tyree Spectator: James Nevins Prisoner: W. Keith Scott Photojournalist: Tom Lancaster Street Walker: Lonnie M. Henderson Court Audience Member: Brian Thomas Wise Drag Race Spectator: Ken Holliday Antieau’s Secretary: Terry Menefee Gau Driver: Marc Anthony Lowe Racetrack Spectator: Jay SanGiovanni D.C Teen: Tyrell Ford Baby Boy #1: James Atticus Abebayehu Phil’s Dad: Jim D. Johnston …: Derick Newson Boarding House Boy: Miles Hopkins Construction Worker: Kenneth William Clarke Reporter: Robert Furner Secretary: Victoria Chavatel Jimison Field Hand / Drag Strip Attendee / Shot Gun Shack Attendee (uncredited): Darrick Claiborne Courtroom Spectator (uncredited): Raymond H. Johnson Drag Race Driver: Dean Mumford Pregnant Girl: Rebecca Turner Magistrate: Mike Shiflett County Jailer: Greg Cooper Supreme Court Reporter: A. Smith Harrison Press Conference Reporter: Keith Flippen Soundman: Jason Alan Cook Courtroom Spectator (uncredited): Lucas N. Hall Film Crew: Director: Jeff Nichols Editor: Julie Monroe Producer: Peter Saraf Executive Producer: Jack Turner Executive Producer: Jared Ian Goldman Executive Producer: Brian Kavanaugh-Jones Unit Production Manager: Sarah Green Art Direction: Jonathan Guggenheim Casting: Francine Maisler Production Design: Chad Keith Storyboard: Nancy Buirski Associate Producer: Oge Egbuono Producer: Colin Firth Producer: Marc Turtletaub Set Decoration: Adam Willis Producer: Ged Doherty Unit Production Manager: Will Greenfield Costume Design: Erin Benach Music Supervisor: Lauren Mikus Original Music Composer: David Wingo Still Photographer: Ben Rothstein Director of Photography: Adam Stone Script Supervisor: Jean-Paul Chreky Special Effects Coordinator: Gary Pilkinton Special Effects Technician: Trevor Smithson Property Master: A. Patrick Storey First Assistant Director: Cas Donovan Second Assistant Director: Tommy Martin Stunt Driver: Dean Mumford Key Makeup Artist: Katie Middleton Second Second Assistant Director: Ben LeDoux Construction Buyer: Roslyn Blankenship Assistant Property Master: Hannah Ross Dialogue Editor: Brandon Proctor Genetator Operator: Maxwel Fisher Post Production Supervisor: Susan E. Novick Boom Operator: Proctor Trivette Leadman: Stephen G. Shifflette Second Assistant “A” Camera: Stephen McBride Sound Effects Editor: David Grimaldi Foley Mixer: Judy Kirschner Makeup Department Head: Julia Lallas Hairstylist: Brian Morton Sound Effects Editor: Joel Dougherty ADR Mixer: Chris Navarro Sound Effects Editor: P.K. Hooker ...
#biography#civil rights#court#interracial couple#interracial marriage#interracial relationship#Marriage#supreme court#Top Rated Movies#virginia
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Book Release: The Mountain Mystic by Russell W. Johnson
Book Release: The Mountain Mystic by Russell W. Johnson
We are please to announce the second book in The Mountaineer Mysteries, The Mountain Mystic by Russell W. Johnson. We hope you’ll enjoy it as much as you did The Moonshine Messiah. What to Expect inside… Since succeeding her dearly departed husband, Bill, to become Jasper County’s first female sheriff, Mary Beth Cain has closed more cases than any three of her male predecessors combined. But…
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#a mountaineer mystery#book release#russell w johnson#the mountain mystic#the mountain mystic by russell w johnson
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Mulher admite envenenar café do ex-marido com água sanitária nos EUA
Reprodução/GMA/Pima County Sheriff’s Department Mulher foi gravada pelo ex-marido enquanto envenena seu café Uma mulher do Arizona, nos Estados Unidos, se declarou culpada nessa segunda-feira (8) por ter colocado água sanitária no café do ex-marido, um funcionário da Força Aérea dos Estados Unidos. Melody Felicano Johnson foi presa no Arizona em agosto do ano passado, por tentativa de homicídio…
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Sequatchie County Sheriff's Department Receives Donation for Dual-Purpose Narcotics Detection/Passive Tracking Dog
Project K-9 Hero, a nonprofit organization dedicated to providing medical assistance to retired Police K-9s and Military Working Dogs, proudly announces its latest initiative in support of law enforcement. Founder and CEO Jason Johnson has confirmed that Project K-9 Hero will be donating the necessary funding to the Sequatchie County Sheriff’s Office for the acquisition of a Dual-purpose…
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#Dunlap News#Marion County News#Project K-9 Hero#Sequatchie County News#Sequatchie County Sheriff&039;s Department#Sequatchie Valley News#Whitwell News
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Jamir De’Jawn “JD” Russ, a 16-year-old capital murder suspect, was arrested after a two-hour standoff in Sylacauga. He is charged with two counts of capital murder in the February slaying of Temekia Fluker, who was killed in a shooting from a vehicle and shooting into an occupied residence incident. Fluker was not the intended target and she was found dead inside her home, having been shot at least once. Multiple agencies including the Talladega County Drug Task Force, the U.S. Marshals Gulf Coast Regional Fugitive Task Force, the Talladega County Sheriff’s Office, and Sylacauga police, were involved in the arrest. The standoff in which Russ was taken into custody was described as “tense,” but he surrendered peacefully after two hours. The community was thanked for its patience during the standoff, and Chief Kelley Johnson expressed gratitude for all the agencies involved in the arrest. The incident marked the second murder in two years involving a member of the Fluker family at the same home. In an earlier case, 22-year-old Nartavius Cortez Fluker-Smith, Fluker’s brother, was shot and killed while sitting in his vehicle in front of the residence, and 19-year-old Sheridan Rashon Clark is awaiting trial for his murder. Johnson stated that Fluker’s murder deeply saddened and shocked the community, emphasizing that her death was a tragedy that affected everyone. The police department has been working tirelessly to investigate the case, taking statements from witnesses and collecting evidence from the crime scene. The warrants issued against Russ were related to the shooting incident resulting in Fluker’s death and Johnson mentioned that several rounds had been fired into the home, ultimately leading to Fluker being struck. The chief highlighted the impact of Fluker’s death on the community and expressed the department’s commitment to bringing justice for her. Russ is facing charges of capital murder for the slaying of Fluker at 306 South Main Avenue. Fluker’s death marked the second murder associated with the Fluker family at or near the same residence. The shooting was a result of gunfire from a vehicle and into an occupied residence incident, and Fluker was found dead inside her home. The police arrived at the scene to discover her body and proceeded to gather evidence and statements from witnesses throughout the night. The intended target of the shooting was not Fluker, as authorities noted that she was a victim of the incident. The arrest of Russ came following an intense standoff which concluded with his peaceful surrender after two hours. Johnson expressed gratitude to the agencies involved in the arrest and thanked the community for their patience during the process. The Fluker family has now endured two tragic murders, leaving the community shocked and saddened. The police department is committed to seeking justice for Fluker and has been diligently investigating the case, working to bring closure to the community affected by these senseless acts of violence.
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