truesee's Blog

Tyler Perry gives Georgia family a new home

5:46 p.m. Friday, April 8, 2011

Tyler Perry gives Georgia family a new home

 

The Associated Press

NEWNAN, Ga. — Movie mogul Tyler Perry delivered on a Christmas promise when he handed the keys of a new four-bedroom house to an 88-year-old woman who lost her rural Georgia home to a fire.

 
FILE - In this March 31, 2011 file photo, Tyler Perry, recipient of the CinemaCon Visionary Award, arrives for the CinemaCon Big Screen Achievement Awards in Las Vegas. Perry delivered on a Christmas promise when he handed the keys of a new four-bedroom house to an 88-year-old woman who lost her rural Georgia home to a fire. (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello, File)

 

Rosa Lee Ransby, right, waved to the media, flanked by her grandchildren, in front of her new house. (Source: CNN)

Rosa Lee Ransby, right, waved to the media, flanked by her grandchildren, in front of her new house.

 

Rosa Lee Ransby and her seven grand- and great-grandchildren lost their home a week before Christmas.

Perry saw the story on a local television newscast and decided to rebuild the house. He also fully furnished it.

More than 20 family members attended ceremony in rural Coweta County on Friday.

Perry says he wanted to do something for Ransby when he found out the family didn't have any way to rebuild. He says the main thing was getting her enough space for the children and for them to have room to play.

.

Entry #4,338

Federal judge, 103, still hearing federal cases

Federal judge, 103, still hearing federal cases

 

By ROXANA HEGEMAN

The Associated Press

2:01 p.m. Sunday, April 10, 2011

WICHITA, Kan. — In a courtroom in Wichita, the day begins much as it has for the past 49 years: Court is in session, U.S. District Judge Wesley Brown presiding. But what happens next is no longer routine; it's a testament to one man's sheer determination.

As lawyers and litigants wait in respectful silence, Brown, who is 103, carefully steers his power wheelchair behind the bench, his stooped frame almost disappearing behind its wooden bulk. He adjusts under his nose the plastic tubes from the oxygen tank lying next to the day's case documents. Then his voice rings out loud and firm to his law clerk, "Call your case."

Brown is the oldest working federal judge in the nation, one of four appointees by President Kennedy still on the bench. Federal judgeships are lifetime appointments, and no one has taken that term more seriously than Brown.

"As a federal judge, I was appointed for life or good behavior, whichever I lose first," Brown quipped in an interview. How does he plan to leave the post? "Feet first," he says.

In a profession where advanced age isn't unusual — and, indeed, is valued as a source of judicial wisdom — Brown has left legal colleagues awestruck by his stamina and devotion to work. His service also epitomizes how the federal court system keeps working even as litigation steadily increases, new judgeships remain rare, and judicial openings go unfilled for months or years.

"Senior judges keep the federal court system afloat given the rising case loads," said David Sellers, spokesman for the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts. Of the 1,294 sitting federal judges, Brown is one of 516 on "senior status," a form of semi-retirement that allows a judge to collect his salary but work at a reduced case level if he chooses. They handle almost a quarter of federal district trials.

And no one alive has logged more service than Brown, who took senior status in 1979 but still worked fulltime until recently. In March, he stopped taking new criminal cases and lightened his case load a bit. He still takes his full share of the new civil cases.

"I do it to be a public service," Brown said. "You got to have a reason to live. As long as you perform a public service, you have a reason to live."

Brown gets a ride to the federal courthouse at 8:30 a.m. every workday from the assisted living center where he lives. Until he was in his 90s, he climbed the stairs to his fourth-floor chambers. He works until about 3 p.m. presiding over hearings, reading court filings and discussing cases with his law clerks who handle the legal research.

In one concession to age, he keeps court hearings relatively short. But he listens intently to testimony and tells defendants to speak up or slow down if he has trouble following their statements. And, if necessary, he can be stern with lawyers, prodding them in a strong voice not to waste time.

Brown is known for his compassion for defendants, even those he sends to prison. When he sentenced Kassie Liebsch last month to 37 months for her role in a ticket scalping scandal, he told the tearful 28-year-old woman how much he and other court officials wanted her to succeed in the future.

"As an old man, it is hard for me to say I am sorry it happened," Brown told her. "I know you will do the right thing. Good luck and be well."

Brown also serves a senior statesman in the courthouse, giving colleagues the benefit of his long experience.

"He never pressures us or tells us what to do," said District Judge Eric Melgren, 54. "He shares his thoughts and we can benefit as we see fit."

Melgren, formerly the U.S. attorney for Kansas, recalled that Brown took him aside after he became top federal prosecutor and advised him that the most important decisions he would make would be the ones no one knew about — the ones in which he declined to prosecute someone. Melgren found that to be sound advice. Melgren said Brown also shares his thoughts on points of law.

"I don't get the perspective that he is stuck in the last century," Melgren said. "His views are pretty much as the rest of us."

Brown has a computer on his desk that he uses to keep up with current events and trends.

Some parties in lawsuits, however, have been skeptical about the idea of a 103-year-old judge hearing their case.

Last month Brown ruled in favor of Omaha-based Northern Natural Gas Co. in its bid to condemn more than 9,100 acres in south-central Kansas to contain gas migrating from an underground storage facility. The decision angered some of the 173 property owners affected.

"I don't care how good a guy he is," said Dorothy Trinkle, of Preston, one of the landowners. "Your mental and physical attributes diminish with age and I think there should be a cutoff date for federal judges. This is ridiculous to have him in there at that age."

Brown — who was born on June 22, 1907, in Hutchinson, Kan. — is six years older than the next oldest sitting federal judge. At least eight other federal judges are in their 90s, according to a federal court database.

He began his career in private practice in Hutchinson in 1933 and was appointed U.S. district judge in 1962. He has outlived two wives and only moved into an assisted living center four years ago.

Brown was able to play golf with his staff until 2006. Now, because of his physical limitations, his chief hobby is reading. He prefers murder mysteries and borrows Louis L'Amour westerns from his law clerk.

Brown has asked his colleagues to notify him if at any point they feel he is no longer able to do his job.

"I will quit this job when I think it is time," Brown said. "And I hope I do so and leave the country in better shape because I have been a part of it."

FILE - In this June 4, 2007 file photo, U.S. Federal District Judge Wesley Brown poses in Wichita, Kan. Brown is the oldest working federal judge in the nation, one of four appointees by President Kennedy still on the bench. Federal judgeships are lifetime appointments, and no one has taken that term more seriously than Brown.(AP Photo/The Hutchinson

April 10, 2011 02:01 PM EDT

Entry #4,337

Third graders surf web for pornographic pictures on school computers

Third graders at Astoria elementary school surf pornographic pictures on school computers

Clare Trapasso
DAILY NEWS WRITER

Sunday, April 10th 2011, 4:00 AM

Janet Gordillo, Parent Association President of PS 85 in Queens, spoke out on how better measures must be taken to ensure students can't access inappropriate content at school.
 
Pace for News
 
Janet Gordillo, Parent Association President of PS 85 in Queens, spoke out on how better measures must be taken to ensure students can't access inappropriate content at school.
 
A group of third-graders at a Queens elementary school recently got an illicit lesson on the female anatomy after they pulled up what school officials called "inappropriate" images on their classroom computers.

Once the principal at Public School 85 in Astoria was notified, city technicians wiped the computers clean, installed updated Internet filters and sent the seven pint-size voyeurs to in-school suspension, school officials said.

But the ease with which a group of 8-year-olds bypassed the city's Internet filter system has sparked worries that this could be a citywide problem.

"The concern here is that a Department of Education filter shouldn't fail the [test of] 'Are you smarter than a third-grader?'" said City Councilman Peter Vallone Jr. (D-Astoria), who is looking into the matter.

"As a parent, I hope that something like this never happens again," he added.

PS 85 Principal Ann Gordon-Chang said it was an "isolated" incident.

"It wasn't porn," said Gordon-Chang, who learned what happened last month after a parent complained. "The kids typed in 'hot girls' and pictures came up."

"When we found out, the children weren't allowed to go into the computers," she said. "It was dealt with immediately, parents were contacted."

Since the incident, the Education Department has installed new filters citywide, Gordon-Chang said.

The city can also block websites that schools deem inappropriate, an Education Department official said. But city officials did not immediately respond to questions about the filters and the updates.

Parents were pleased to learn the city was putting in new measures.

"We need better filtering to make sure this doesn't happen again," said PS 85 Parent Association President Janet Gordillo. "I'm sure if it's happening in this one school, it's happening in other schools."

Monica Major, a Bronx rep on the influential Panel for Educational Policy, agreed.

"Nothing is foolproof, but a lot of security breaches are preventable," she said. "It may be expensive, but you have to put the money out to protect the students."

James Cox, a computer and information science professor at Brooklyn College, said that no filter is 100% effective.

"There are billions of Web pages," he said. And "sites could cleverly disguise their content so they might not initially appear to be inappropriate."

But he added that the city's filter wasn't very good if a group of third-graders were able to circumvent it.

"However, if any of the kids is clever and has a 14-year-old sibling at home that knows how to hack, there's probably no system that would be secure," he said.

Sonya Hampton, Parent Teacher Association president of PS 149 in Harlem, said the solution is paying more attention to students.

"When the children are in the classroom, they should be monitored better," Hampton said. "We should have had more supervision."

Entry #4,336

Toddler 15-Months-Old Served Alcohol at Applebee's by Mistake

Toddler Mistakenly Served Alcohol at Applebee's

15-month-old's blood alcohol level was .10

Updated: Saturday, 09 Apr 2011, 9:23 PM EDT
Published : Saturday, 09 Apr 2011, 9:21 PM EDT

MADISON HEIGHTS, Mich. (WJBK) - A big scare for an Oak Park family, their toddler was accidentally served alcohol in a kids meal at Applebee's. After a few swigs from his sippy cup, the 15-month-old boy needed a ride to the hospital. Taylor Dill-Reese says her son started acting strangely after drinking what she thought was apple juice. So, she tasted it and discovered the cup contained an alcoholic margarita mix.

The incident allegedly happened at 4:30pm Friday at the Applebee's on 14 Mile Rd. After being checked out by doctors, the family learned the boy's blood alcohol level was .10 -- over the legal limit for an adult driver.

"Nobody at the table ordered alcoholic drinks," said Dill-Reese. "So, he definitely shouldn't have received one."

The mom says a manager apologized to the family but didn't know what else to do. Thankfully the child is okay after being checked out at the hospital. Applebee's issued a statement calling the incident  "unacceptable" and promised to work with local authorities and even conduct their own investigation.

LINK TO VIDEO:

www.myfoxdetroit.com/dpp/news/toddler-mistakenly-served-alcohol-at-applebees-20110409-rs

Entry #4,335

Former McDonald's Manager Jailed For Beating 17 Year Old Employee

Former Fast Food Manager Jailed For Beating

Judge revokes bond

Former Fast Food Manager Jailed For Beating
 
Stephanie Scurlock

6:36 p.m. CDT, April 8, 2011

FAST FACTS:
  • Judge revokes bond of McDonald's manager involved in beating
  • 17-year-old victim and family say wheels of justice turning
  • Focus also on federal civil rights lawsuit against McDonalds

(Memphis 04/08/2011) A Shelby County judge throws a former night manager for McDonalds in jail even before deciding his fate.

Jackson Martin III is charged with beating a 17 year old employee at a Raleigh-area McDonalds. The incident happened 14 months ago and Martin pleaded guilty to the charges. The judge is still deciding his fate but while he does Martin will wait it out in jail.

Judge James Lammey revoked the bond of former McDonald's manager Jackson Martin III.

The judge's action means Martin will go to jail and wait it out until his next court date on May 23rd.

Martin's victim, 17-year-old Jarelle Gray, is glad.

"It feels like at least some justice was done and I believe that Judge Lammey did the right thing," said Jarelle Gray, 17 year old victim.

Martin's family left upset. In exchange for his guilty plea he is hoping for probation or judicial diversion, which wipes away a crime after one year of being trouble free. His attorney says it can still happen.

"He can still grant judicial diversion. He can still grant judicial probation," Justin Gee.

The video from the Raleigh McDonald's shows what happened.

Police say the two got into it because the teenager wanted to clock out.

The words turned violent when Martin started punching Gray in the face and slammed his head against a counter.

The judge asked to see the video from different angles.

"Well, it's rare in any case when the actual crime is recorded on video tape," Kevin Rardin.

Meanwhile, the Gray family looks forward to holding Martin and McDonald's accountable.

"They're thousands of parents that entrust their kids to this company to work and we've got to look at what kind of protections they give these parents and give these kids," said Gray family lawyer D'Army Bailey.

The sentencing phase of this hearing continues May 23.

That's when Judge Lammey is likely to render his decision.

He'll decide if Martin will stay in jail, get time served or probation.
 
 
 
PREVIOUS STORY WITH PHOTO: 
 

Father Of Beaten McDonald's Employee Claims Memphis Police Didn't Do Their Job

Jerome Gray Says Officers Were In The Restaurant Eating At The Time His Son Was Beaten

Father Of Beaten McDonald's Employee Claims Memphis Police Didn't Do Their Job
 
Alex Coleman

3:38 p.m. CST, February 16, 2010

 
  • Fast facts:
  • - McDonald's Manager Employee Fired After Allegedly Beating Teen Worker
  • -Former Manager Faces Simple Assault Charges
  • -Teen's Father Says Memphis Police Could Have Done More
(Memphis, TN/February 16, 2010) Jerome Gray is outraged over the beating of his son. Gray said, "This child was attacked at Mcdonalds."

His 17-year old son, Jarelle, is a McDonald's employee. He was punched, kicked and thrown against the counter by his supervisor after a dispute over free food and when his shift was supposed to end.

Gray said, "I got a phone call from the owner of McDonald's. He told me Jarelle didn't do anything wrong and he was sorry for what took place. He said he fired the manager."

The manager, Martin Jackson, has been fired, but Gray says what bothers him is that three Memphis police officers were at that very McDonald's eating at the same time his son was being beaten.

Gray said, "Three MPD officers were there on the scene and didn't do anything. How can you be feet away? How can you be feet away from where a crime is taking place and not do anything?"


The former McDonald's supervisor now faces simple assault charges, but Gray, who's a Shelby County Deputy Jailer, says that charge is not severe enough.

Gray said, "This right here, hitting a person's face against a counter, against machinery, things like that. You're using the machinery and counter as a weapon."

We did try talking with the Memphis Police Department about the case. I was told they would not be doing an interview at this time because the investigation is ongoing. Police are looking at surveillance video of the incident to decide if the simple assault charges will be upgraded to aggravated assault. Police tell me if it's determined that Jarelle Gray has broken bones or if a weapon was used the charges could likely be upgraded against the former McDonald's supervisor.

But those words don't comfort Jerome Gray. He says his son, who once dreamed of going to college and becoming a police officer, no longer has trust in them after the way they handled the investigation.

Gray said, "Now that he has experienced this I don't think he even trusts the police officers or the police department. I don't trust them."
Entry #4,334

Is Your Faith Making You Fat?

Is Your Faith Making You Fat?

1:16 AM, Apr 5, 2011

Brigida Mack 

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (WBTV) -- Could your faith make you more prone to obesity? Does participating in weekly church activities make you fat? That's the premise of one recent study.

Researchers at Northwestern University studied 2, 433 people ages 20 to 32 over a period of 18 years.

All of the participants started at a normal weight and the study concluded "people with a high frequency of religious participation in young adulthood were 50% more likely to become obese by middle age than those with no religious participation in young adulthood."

But Dr. Russ Dean, co-pastor of Park Road Baptist Church in south Charlotte, isn't buying it.

I think it's kind of crazy," he said. "I'm kind of offended by the notion that people who go to church get fat."

The study looked specifically at church activities which, let's face it, often involved food.  We're talking pot lucks, bake sales and barbecues.

But even with the regular weekly meal, Dr. Dean says the study's finding are a stretch.

"We serve a Wednesday night meal," he pointed out. "You're here once a week. We do maybe five pot lucks a year. So you eat pot luck five times a year and you're telling me that's going to make you overweight."

Carroll Lane, a long-time Southern Baptist agrees.

"I know that being a southern Baptist we like to eat a lot ... I don't think there's anymore obese people in the church then not. I think it's just like a problem with our whole society."

More important than what his congregation is eating, Dr. Dean said, is the work they're doing.

"You ought to talk as much about the activity that we do and the places our people they go and what they do and where they're helping," he said. "The calories they're expending doing all the mission we do."

While obesity appears to be an issue for religious people according to this study, previous studies have shown that the faithful tend to live longer, be less likely to smoke, and to have better mental health status.

 

LINK TO VIDEO:

http://www.digtriad.com/video/default.aspx?bctid=886553095001

Entry #4,333

Research: Unemployment plays role in early deaths

Research: Unemployment plays role in early deaths

 

Robert Preidt

USA Today

HealthDay

April 8, 2011
 

Unemployment can be deadly, especially for men, researchers have found. In the new study, investigators analyzed 40 years of data from 20 million people in 15 countries and found that being unemployed increases a person's risk of premature death by 63%. The quality of a nation's health-care system did not affect this level of risk, the study authorsnoted.

They also found that unemployment boosts men's risk of premature death much more than it does women's risk (78%vs. 37%) and that the risk of death is particularly high for people younger than 50.

"We suspect that even today, not having a job is more stressful for men than for women," Eran Shor, a sociology professor at McGill University in Montreal, said in a university news release.

"When a man loses his job, it still often means that the family will become poorer and suffer in various ways, which in turn can have a huge impact on a man's health by leading to both increased smoking, drinking or eating, and by reducing the availability of healthy nutrition and health-care services," he explained.

Shor and colleagues said their finding of a causal relationship between unemployment and increased risk of death is groundbreaking.

"Until now, one of the big questions in the literature has been about whether pre-existing health conditions, such as diabetes or heart problems, or behaviors such as smoking, drinking or drug use, lead to both unemployment and a greater risk of death," Shor said.

"What's interesting about our work is that we found that pre-existing health conditions had no effect, suggesting that the unemployment-mortality relationship is quite likely a causal one. This probably has to do with unemployment causing stress and negatively affecting one's socioeconomic status, which in turn leads to poorer health and higher mortality rates," he stated.

The findings, published in the March issue of the journal Social Science & Medicine, suggest the need for public health initiatives that target unemployed people.

Entry #4,332

Artist erects 15 foot cross with noose in front yard is shocked neighbors...

Campbellford artist’s cross and noose protest raises residents’ ire

Sat Apr 9 2011
 
Artist Brent Townsend erected a 5-metre high cross topped with a noose on his front lawn in Campbellford, Ont., to protest what he describes as "mistreatment" by the municipal government.

Artist Brent Townsend erected a 5-metre high cross topped with a noose on his front lawn in Campbellford, Ont., to protest what he describes as "mistreatment" by the municipal government.

SUPPLIED PHOTO
Chloé Fedio Staff Reporter

A Campbellford artist celebrated for his design of the toonie has drawn the ire of his community after he erected a 5-metre cross on his lawn and hung a noose from the top.

Brent Townsend knows the display is especially controversial in a town that gained notoriety last Halloween when a Ku Klux Klan getup won first place in a costume contest.

But the 48-year-old wildlife artist, who created the cross out of old barn beams, said it’s his last resort in a four-year battle with the municipality over the planned construction of a bridge. His home is slated for demolition.

“I’m not trying to stoke racial fires . . . It’s a symbol of mistreatment,” Townsend told the Star on Saturday. “It’s not a hate crime. If anything it’s a hate crime against me. I’ve been a victim.”

Campbellford resident Troy Varty said it was “bad enough” when one man dressed in a white cloak and draped in the Confederate flag led another in blackface through a party at the Legion with a noose last Halloween. The duo won first place in the costume contest.

The combination of the noose and the cross is especially offensive so close to Easter, Varty said.

“A noose represents hatred — a symbol of death through intimidation, fear, control and degradation of the heart and the soul,” Varty said. “Everyone who I have talked about it to is very upset and all say the same thing — that, yes, it should be taken down. There are many churches in the area.”

The controversial display has been up for five days across the street from the Canadian Tire where Renee Fairman works.

“With everything that has happened in our town at Halloween and the controversy, to do something like this is ridiculous,” Fairman said. “I’m not keen on it.”

The Ontario Provincial Police have received complaints “from neighbours that are upset” but the matter has been referred to the Campbellford bylaw department, said Const. Peter Leon. The display of a cross and noose is not a hate crime, he added.

“It’s obviously his property to do as he wishes. There’s no basis for a criminal investigation,” Leon said.

Townsend is originally from Scarborough but has been living in Campbellford, about 180 kilometres northeast of Toronto, since 1996. He was pleased when the town put up an 8-metre metal toonie in a local park to honour his polar bear design.

“I was fine with that. I thought, if the town wants to create a tourist attraction, and want to have a symbol, that’s great,” Townsend said.

Now Townsend has put up his own symbol — one that he hopes will grab the municipal government’s attention.

“Some people might find that image disturbing — I find it disturbing — but the idea is to be thought-provoking,” he said. “It was out of sheer desperation for the way I have been treated that I chose a very edgy subject.”

Officials with the municipality of Trent Hills, which governs Campbellford, could not be reached for comment.

Entry #4,331

Why Republican voters are warming to Donald Trump for 2012

The Christian Science Monitor the vote blog

Why Republican voters are warming to Donald Trump for 2012

 

'The Donald' has a 52 percent favorable rating among Republicans, a new poll shows. Because Donald Trump acts like the boss, voters may be inclined to think of him that way.

Peter Grier
Staff writer
April 8, 2011 at 12:27 pm EDT

Developer/reality show star Donald Trump appears to be pretty popular with Republican voters right now, in case you haven’t heard. He tied for second with Mike Huckabee, behind Mitt Romney, in a recent Wall Street Journal/NBC poll that measured the presidential nomination preferences of GOP voters. And he’s got a 52 percent favorable rating among Republicans in a just-released Gallup survey.

Why is he doing so well among adherents of the GOP? Perhaps because he’s running as if he were already the party’s boss, as opposed to the other candidates, who may seem like applicants for the job, comparatively speaking.

Mr. Trump’s CEO-like forcefulness has been on full display in his recent spate of television interviews. What do we do in Iraq? Stay and keep the oil! How do we handle China’s rise? Slap a 25 percent tariff on Chinese goods! Was President Obama born in America? There’s no proof – and I’m sending investigators to Hawaii to check into the story!

IN PICTURES: Will these Republicans run in 2012?

“It’s all about leadership. You have to be able to make deals,” Trump said Thursday on CNN.

Trump doesn’t back down when challenged. In the face of tough questions from interviewers, he’s doubled down on the whole where-was-Obama-born question, for instance. He waves away evidence such as Obama’s certificate of live birth from a hospital in Hawaii and contemporaneous birth announcements placed in Hawaiian newspapers.

“He could’ve been born in Kenya and gone over to the United States,” Trump said on CNN.

He’s even summoned an Arizona state lawmaker who’s the author of a so-called “birther” bill to meet him at Trump HQ in New York. Republican state Rep. Carl Seel’s legislation would require presidential candidates to prove that they were born in the United States to be eligible for the state’s electoral votes.

All evidence is that a big segment of GOP voters like this.

“The fact is that Donald Trump is doing a better job when he’s in front of the camera articulating a message against Barack Obama’s second term in office. He doesn’t pull punches, and he just speaks very plainly,” said a recent post on the conservative Red State blog.

Of course, some of that plain speaking is against GOP orthodoxy. Trump has criticized the House Republican long-term budget issued this week by Rep. Paul Ryan (R) of Wisconsin, for instance.

“I think what Paul has done is very dangerous for the Republican Party,” Trump said Thursday.

The electorate as a whole has much more mixed feelings about Trump than does the subset of Republicans. The just-released Gallup survey notes that if Democrats and independents are taken into account Trump’s favorability rating drops to 43 percent, with 47 percent holding an unfavorable view of the “Celebrity Apprentice” star.

Given that polls show no dominant front-runner in the GOP nomination race, Trump could still do well, notes Gallup. (Trump himself says he’ll decide whether to run in June.)

“Trump does enjoy what many candidates strive hard to develop – 90 percent name recognition among all Americans ... [but] whether Trump could parlay that familiarity into voter support in primaries and caucuses is an open question,” writes Gallup analyst Frank Newport.

Entry #4,328

Woman Finds $189K Winning Lottery Ticket in Purse

Fairburn, Ga. Woman Finds $189K Winning Lottery Ticket in Purse

Updated: Wednesday, 06 Apr 2011, 12:54 PM EDT
Published : Wednesday, 06 Apr 2011, 12:07 PM EDT

MY FOX ATLANTA STAFF

 

FAIRBURN, Ga. - Georgia Lottery officials say a Fairburn woman is $189,000 richer after finding a Fantasy 5 lottery ticket while cleaning out her purse.

Lottery officials say Rhonda Williams' winning ticket had been in her purse since the January 17 drawing.

In a statement released by lottery officials Williams is quoted as saying "“I found the ticket this weekend while cleaning out my purse. I went online to check the ticket, and I just sat there for a moment.”

A Stop N Go in Fairburn sold the winning ticket. The Quick Pik contained all five winning numbers.

Williams says she plans to pay off bills and perhaps take a vacation.

"I am shocked but very grateful," says Williams.

 
 
Rhonda Williams_20110406120550_JPG

Georgia Lottery officials say a Fairburn woman is $189,000 richer after finding a Fantasy 5 lottery ticket while cleaning out her purse. Lottery officials say Rhonda Williams' winning ticket had been in her purse since the January 17 …

Entry #4,326

Woman boards bus and assualts children who threw trash

Bridgeport woman climbed aboard school bus and assaulted children

Tom Cleary and Brittany Lyte, Staff Writers

Updated 05:57 p.m., Friday, April 8, 2011

BRIDGEPORT -- A city woman was arrested Thursday afternoon after police say she boarded a school bus and assaulted several children who were on board.

Police said 29-year-old Daisha Womack attacked the students after claiming they had thrown objects at her car. She was charged with criminal trespass, breach of peace, three counts of third-degree assault and three counts of risk of injury to a minor. She was held on $10,000 bond.

The woman told police she was driving behind the We Transport bus when objects thrown by some of the students on the bus out of its windows landed on her car, police said.

According to police spokesman Tim Quinn, Womack got out of her car when the bus stopped on Sanford Place and went onto the bus. When she reached the rear of the bus, she found one of the girls she claimed was tossing the trash duck under a seat, Quinn said. Police said Womack began yelling at the girl and then claimed she was hit from behind by another girl and then jumped by several students.

Womack had marks and scratches on her face, police said, but she was immedieatly arrested and put into a police cruiser upon officers arrival.

Police said they interviewed the bus driver and several other students. Some of those interviewed claimed that Womack hit the girls and spat in their face, police said. Other students said the woman was attacked first as she claimed, police said.

Brandon Johnson, the father of a 12-year-old girl and 11-year-old girl who saw the alleged incident said his children told him, "A lady, an adult, jumped on the bus and attacked two minor girls. Apparently something was thrown off the bus and it hit her car."

Johnson said the bus driver flagged down police and arranged for another bus to bring home the students still on the bus.

He said his children who normally get home at 4:30 p.m. did not get home until 5:30 p.m.

A student complained of head pain and paramedics took her to St. Vincent's Medical Center for treatment.

Police said they are continuing to investigate the incident and will receive a copy of the onboard bus security video for review.



Read more: http://www.ctpost.com/news/article/Cops-Bridgeport-woman-climbed-aboard-school-bus-1328678.php#ixzz1J1oVt2bp
Entry #4,325

Judge on DUI task force charged with DUI

Mont. judge on DUI task force charged with DUI

 

John Grant Emeigh of The Montana Standard

Friday, April 8, 2011 11:45 am

 

Charging documents allege a Butte justice of the peace was found wandering around the police station under the influence of drugs on a Saturday in November. 

Robert “Bob” E. Lee was charged Thursday in Butte district court with misdemeanor driving under the influence of alcohol or drugs. Lee is accused of driving his vehicle in Butte on the morning of Nov. 13, 2010, while under the influence of the methadone, which is classified as a dangerous drug, according to court documents. 

Assistant attorney general Chad Parker of Helena filed the charge.

An affidavit alleges Butte police officers found Lee at the police station about 10 a.m. Saturday, Nov. 13, appearing confused and under the influence of either alcohol or a narcotic. Lee allegedly was found by police officers knocking on the window in the police station lobby at 225 N. Alaska. 

Lee asked officers to let him into the courthouse because he had a wedding to perform that morning. When the officers told him they didn’t have access to the courthouse, Lee allegedly said he would perform the wedding ceremony in the lobby of the police station, the nine-page affidavit states. 

Officers reported that Lee appeared to be sweating profusely and appeared confused. At one point, officers reported that Lee walked to the third floor of the police station to get paperwork even though he doesn’t have an office in the police station. 

Lee allegedly told officers he had driven to the courthouse that morning, and police say they found his vehicle parked behind the courthouse in a handicapped zone. 

Since Lee appeared to be under the influence, police took him to the jail to undergo field sobriety testing, which he allegedly failed to perform properly. 

He was taken to St. James Healthcare for a blood draw to be tested for possible drug intoxication. Toxicology results determined Lee had methadone in his system, the affidavit says. Methadone is a synthetic opioid used to manage chronic pain or as treatment for opioid dependency. 

Police found a wedding party waiting for Lee at the courthouse about 10:30 a.m. Charging documents claim police also found Lee’s driver’s license and some credit cards on the ground outside the courthouse. 

The misdemeanor DUI charge carries a maximum penalty of six months in jail and up to a $1,000 fine. District judges Kurt Krueger and Brad Newman recused themselves from presiding over Lee’s case because they work with him. 

District Judge Loren Tucker will hear the case. 

Lee, a retired Butte police officer, has been a justice of the peace in Butte for about 10 years. He played an instrumental role in starting the newly formed DUI court along with justice Debra Williams. An earlier story incorrectly reported the Lee served as the DUI court judge. However, Williams is the DUI court presiding judge.

In previously interviews, Lee told The Montana Standard that there is no merit to the incident and declined to discuss the case.

buy this photo Courtesy photo Robert E. ‘Bob’ Lee

 

LINK TO COURT DOCUMENTS:

http://www.mtstandard.com/pdf_1ee5b7ec-6209-11e0-9aca-001cc4c002e0.html

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