Dawson County news. (Dawsonville, Georgia) 2015-current, December 25, 2019, Image 1
Tigers take top spot in Region 7-AAA SPORTS, 1A Check out the inaugural issue of ‘Dawson Living’ INSIDE DawsonCountyNews WEDNESDAY I DECEMBER 25, 2019 DaWSOflNeWS ^COITI DAWSONVILLE, GEORGIA $1.00 Grand jury indicts Stryker, 3 others By Alex Popp DCN Regional Staff Four men arrested following the death of Lumpkin County woman Hannah Bender, have now been formally charged by the Dawson County Superior Court. On Wednesday, Austin Stryker, 24, Isaac Huff, 18, Dylan Reid, 19, were indicted on a host of charges related to Bender’s death, including murder, aggra vated assault and battery, concealing the death of another and violation of the state’s Street Gang Terrorism and Prevention Act. Four men arrested fol lowing the death of Lumpkin County woman Hannah Bender, have now been formally charged by the Dawson County Superior Court. On Wednesday, Austin Stryker, 24, Isaac Huff, 18, Dylan Reid, 19, were indicted on a host of charges related to Bender’s death, including murder, aggravated assault and battery, con cealing the death of another and violation of the state’s Street Gang Terrorism and Prevention Act. According to the indictment, Stryker, Huff and Reid are accused of shooting and stabbing the 21-year-old woman and con cealing her body on Sept. 15, 2019. Harper has been accused of harboring Stryker following the murder. Sources close to the investiga tion claim that they now believe the murder may have happened in Dawson County, before the sus pects disposed of the body in Forsyth County and planted evi dence at a campsite in Lumpkin County in an attempt to throw off investigators. All four men have also been charged for allegedly participat ing in “criminal gang activity” and violating Georgia’s Street Gang Terrorism and Prevention Act. Huff, Harper and Reid are being held in the Dawson County See Indictment 14A 1 V7 4 Stryker ‘Teaching is my calling’ Jessica Taylor Dawson County News Dawson County Middle School science teacher Renee Rogers is announced by DCMS Principal Dr. Randi Sagona asTeacher of the Year for the Dawson County School System on Dec. 10 at the board of education meeting. Renee Rogers is named System-wide Teacher of the Year By Jessica Taylor jtaylor@dawsonnews.com For some, a job is just a job. For Renee Rogers, her job is so much more. It’s a calling. The seventh grade science teacher at Dawson County Middle School was recently announced as, not just her school’s Teacher of the Year, but the system-wide Teacher of the Year. Rogers has been an educator for 31 years, all in Dawson County , and she is “currently teaching the kids of the kids that I taught a long, long time ago.” It all started at home as Rogers watched her grandmother, Lucille Peck, who was a teacher in a one-room schoolhouse. Then two teachers came into Rogers’ life that further inspired her passion for education. “I had a third grade teacher named Lucille Hultsey and she made an egg go into a glass milk bottle and that was like the most magical thing I’d ever seen in my life,” Rogers recalled. It was that moment when Rogers felt a strong connection to science. Having grown up on her family’s chicken farm and grandfather’s dairy farm, she was used to agricultural sciences from an early age. “From the time that I was tiny, I was in one place or the other, and science just came natural to me,” Rogers recalled. Then in middle school, Rogers met her Language Arts teacher, Wendall Allison, who would become the inspi ration for Rogers’ teaching style. “I guess if I could compare myself to any former teacher, I’m probably the most like her,” Rogers said. “There was no drama. She set her standard and you worked to meet her standard. She mothered everybody. She didn’t have any kids of her own but she would always tell us that we were her babies.” Rogers was the fifth third grade teacher to be hired in Dawson County back when she was just 21 years old. For the first 19 years of her career, she taught third grade at Robinson Elementary School (RES) and Black’s Mill Elementary before serving as the Gifted and ESOL Director at RES for another six years. From there, she decided she wanted a change and became a middle school science teach er. She also became the Soccer Mama for the Dawson County High School soccer teams as she never limited her impacts to the classroom. “Over the years, my kids have not just consisted of my kids in the class room but those soccer kids,” Rogers said. “Overall my biggest joy is seeing those kids succeed.” It’s always an experience in Rogers’ classroom as she always strives to bring the outside world into the class room to give her students hands-on Ethics Board accepts 6 of 9 complaints From staff reports The City of Dawsonville Ethics Board met Friday, Dec. 20 to deliberate on the merit of nine ethics complaints brought against Dawsonville City Councilmember Mark French. The complaints against French, which date back to a series of emails between French, Dawsonville City Manager Bob Bolz, and Mr. Steve Sanvi, a private citi zen and resident of Dawsonville, allege that the councilmember abused his power by directing Bolz to consult with City See Ethics 15A Best of Dawson 2020 nominations end December 31 From staff reports There is less than a week left to get nomina tions in for the 2020 Best of Dawson contest. Thousands of nominations have been sub mitted so far in the annual reader’s choice awards contest. Nominate your favorite busi ness, organization, workplace, restaurant or person in each of our over 200 categories and give them a chance to show the world that they are the best that Dawson County has to offer. Readers can nominate a person or business at www.bestofdawson.com. Nominations will not immediately appear as they are moderated to ensure a business or person is in the correct category and that they serve Dawson County. Nominations will close at midnight Dec. 31. Any businesses not nominated by 11:59 p.m. Dec. 31 will not be eligible for the voting period, which will begin Jan. 1 and run through Jan. 31. Winners will be announced in a special pub lication magazine that will insert into the Dawson County News on March 25. A special event for the 2020 winners will be held in March, with more details coming at a later date. For information on marketing opportunities in this year’s contest, contact Jenn Richardson at (706) 265-3384 or jrichardson@dawson- news.com. See Teacher 16A 0 9 0 9 9 Inside Volume 4, Number 65 © 2019, Dawson County News Dawsonville, Georgia Church Events 3B Classifieds 8B Dear Abby 7B Deaths 2A Legals 9B Opinion 9A Sports 1B 3A Shop with a Cop provides over 100 Christmas wishes 6A Lanier Tech director of curriculum wins award At Northside Hospital Cancer Institute, we've treated more prostate cancer cases than any other community hospital in Georgia. 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